The Geneve 9640 is an enhanced TI-99/4A clone. It was sold by the company Myarc as a card to fit into the Texas Instruments TI Peripheral Expansion System.[1][2] Released in 1987, it is in many ways similar to the earlier TI-99/8, which was in prototype form in early 1983. The Geneve 9640 was designed by Paul Charlton,[3] and the graphical swan on the boot up screen was designed by Mi-Kyung Kim.[4]
The Geneve9640 is an enhanced TI-99/4A clone. It was sold by the company Myarc as a card to fit into the Texas Instruments TI Peripheral Expansion System...
commercialized by Myarc. It was designed and implemented specifically for the Geneve9640 by Paul Charlton. MDOS was designed to fully emulate the TI-99/4A computer...
found use in the Tomy Tutor, an esoteric TI99-4/A upgrade called the Geneve9640, and a project printed in Electronics Today: the Powertran Cortex. It...
display processor (VDP) used on the MSX2 home computer, as well as on the Geneve9640 enhanced TI-99/4A clone and the Tatung Einstein 256. It was also used...
RX-78 BBC Master BBC Micro Coleco Adam ColecoVision – used the SN76489AN Geneve9640 IBM PCjr – used the SN76489AN Memotech MTX Neo Geo Pocket Neo Geo Pocket...
computers, and later used in a third-party upgrade to the TI-99/4A — the Geneve9640 'computer-on-a-card'. The V9938, in turn, was succeeded by the V9958...
System (aka MDOS), an operating system emulating the TI-99/4A for the Geneve9640 in 1987 MS-DOS 4.0 (multitasking), a multitasking operating system Multitasking...
(Micropolis DOS) for S-100 MDOS, Myarc Disk Operating System for the Geneve9640 MSX-DOS, a cross between MS-DOS 1.0 and CP/M developed by Microsoft for...