Texas Instruments Professional Portable Computer information
The Texas Instruments Portable Professional Computer (TIPPC) is a portable version of Texas Instruments Professional Computer (TIPC),[1] and are devices that were released on January 31, 1983. The TIPC is a desktop PC and the TIPPC is a fully compatible, portable version of the TIPC, and both machines were DOS-compatible,[2] but not IBM PC compatible. Both computers were most often used by white-collar information workers and professionals who needed to gather, manipulate and transmit information. Texas Instruments (TI) was the first company to release videotape training videos for their computers.
^"OLD-COMPUTERS.COM : The Museum". old-computers.com. Retrieved 2021-05-22.
The TexasInstrumentsProfessionalComputer (abbreviated TIPC or TI PC) and the TexasInstrumentsProfessionalPortableComputer (TIPPC) are personal computers...
Compact Computer 40, a small portablecomputer introduced in 1983 TexasInstrumentsProfessionalComputer (TIPC or TI PC), a personal computer that used...
renamed General Instruments Inc. Because a firm named General Instrument already existed, the company was renamed TexasInstruments that same year. From...
instruments such as pipe organs and amplified instruments such as electric guitars. The category was added to the Hornbostel-Sachs musical instrument...
as the Grundy NewBrain. TexasInstruments, at the time the world's largest chip manufacturer, decided to enter the home computer market with the TI-99/4...
PATA—Parallel ATA PBS—Portable Batch System PC—Personal Computer PCB—Printed Circuit Board PCB—Process Control Block PC DOS—Personal Computer Disc Operating...
1995–96 seasons. Texas portal Companies portal Compaq Portable series List of computer system manufacturers Market share of personal computer vendors In 1998...
small, portable Personal Computers that combine the components, inputs, outputs and capabilities of a Desktop Computer in a small chassis. The portable microcomputer...
which links billions of computers and users. Early computers were meant to be used only for calculations. Simple manual instruments like the abacus have...
According to The Guide to National Professional Certification Programs (1997) by Phillip Barnhart, "certifications are portable, since they do not depend on...
Islands GS register, in the X86 computer architecture Ghostscript, a free software suite for handling PostScript and Portable Document Format (PDF) files...
have multi-line displays, with some models from Hewlett-Packard, TexasInstruments (both US manufacturers), Casio, Sharp, and Canon (all three Japanese...
musical instruments. The exploration of mobiles as a portableinstrument was a result of and academic project. It was the first documented professional ensemble...
this for the human voice and for monophonic instruments such as flutes, for example. Traditional instruments such as drums, acoustic pianos, and accordions...
Byrne Computer Science Collection" (PDF). Archived from the original on 2019-04-16. Retrieved 2019-08-08. "1907: was the first portablecomputer design...
Digital Equipment Corporation, Sanyo, TexasInstruments, Tulip, Wang and Olivetti introduced personal computers that supported MS-DOS, but were not completely...
of leading computer hardware and software vendors, including Arm, AMD, IBM, Intel, Cray, HP, Fujitsu, Nvidia, NEC, Red Hat, TexasInstruments, and Oracle...
several off-the-shelf parts; the main CPU was a 3.58 MHz Zilog Z80, the TexasInstruments TMS9918 graphics chip with 16 KB of dedicated VRAM, sound and partial...
The Texas City refinery explosion occurred on March 23, 2005, when a flammable hydrocarbon vapor cloud ignited and violently exploded at the isomerization...
amd64 versions BeOS Revision 4 and later for x86 based computers (where it replaced the Portable Executable format; the PowerPC version stayed with Preferred...
first released in 1999, was a stand-alone portable email device, with a Z80-based microcontroller. TexasInstruments produced a line of pocket organizers (ending...
consumer digital still camera". DigiBarn computer museum. Carolyn Said, "DYCAM Model 1: The first portable Digital Still Camera", MacWeek, vol. 4, No...
(March 1984). "TexasInstruments". Creative Computing. pp. 30–32. Retrieved February 6, 2015. Maher, Jimmy (July 28, 2013). "A Computer for Every Home...