The Thomson TO9 is a home computer introduced by French company Thomson SA in 1985.[1]
It's based on the Thomson TO7/70 with new features.[2] It included a built-in 320 Kb 3.5" floppy drive unit, and inputs for light pen, joystick, and mouse. The ROM included some utilities like: two BASIC versions, a word processor (Paragraphe) and a database program (Fiche & Dossiers).[3] The machine was compatible with the previous TO7 and TO7/70 models.[4] Ten games were released for the TO9.[5]
Introduced in October 1985, the Thomson TO9 was quickly replaced with the Thomson TO9+ that came out in 1986.[6]
The ThomsonTO9 is a home computer introduced by French company Thomson SA in 1985. It's based on the Thomson TO7/70 with new features. It included a...
1987, it was a TO8 with a 3½-inch floppy disk drive. ThomsonTO9Thomson MO6 ThomsonTO9+ Thomson TO8D The Micromega was fundamental on the adoption of...
1986). "MO6, TO8, TO9+. Thomson présente sa nouvelle gamme". Science & Vie Micro (in French). 31: 106–107. ISSN 0760-6516. "Thomson". Tilt - Jeux et Micro...
in 1984. Version EF9369 was used on computers such as the Thomson MO5NR, MO6, TO8, TO9 and TO9+, and from 1985 to 1989 on the DAI Personal Computer. Based...
modes (powered by the Thomson EF9369 graphics chip), are shared with the other third generation Thomson computers ( MO6 and TO9+). The TO8 has a tape...
The Thomson TO7, also called Thomson 9000 is a home computer introduced by Thomson SA in November 1982, with an original retail price of 3750 FF. By 1983...
Temple of Apshai Trilogy for Commodore 64, Atari 8-bit computers, Apple II, Thomson MO, TO computers, and IBM PC listed at a price of $29.95. It was released...
40×25 Text in 320×200 Graphics 8 colors, 16 for TO7/70 40×200 Thomson systems MO6, TO8 and TO9+ 1986 custom TI gate array plus EF-9369P color palette 16K...