Aucbvax.6323
fa.works
utcsrgv!utzoo!decvax!ucbvax!works
Sat Feb 27 11:05:51 1982
victor 9000
>From David.Anderson@CMU-10A Sat Feb 27 11:03:30 1982
I have some information on the Victor 9000, mentioned recently by Tom Wadlow.
This comparison of the IBM PC and the Victor 9000 comes from the Silcon
Gulch Gazette.  The IBM info comes from IBM's Billion Dollar Baby, by Isaacson
and Juliussen, available for $450 from Future Computing in Richardson,
Texas.  The Sirius/Victor data came from Victor, available in Chicago at
(312) 539-8200.

THE VICTOR 9000
    The Sirius Machine is well worth looking at.  One of the sages of the
computer industry said to us, "Chuck [Chuck Peddle, creator of the 6502
and the Pet] has done all the things IBM should have done."  We think IBM did
lots of things right, but let's compare:
    Like the IBM machine, it uses a 16-bit, 8088 as its CPU.  Like IBM,
Sirius has a detachable keyboard.  In fact, it has five keyboard options
(typewriter, word processor, programmer, etc.)
    IBM offers a video monitor as an option (a necessity for most useful
information processing).  The 9000 comes with a green phospher screen that
is tiltable and turnable - not just a monitor with a handle on the top.
    The 9000 has a graphics mode with an 800 x 400 resolution!  IBM offers,
at best, 640 x 200.

132-CHARS x 50-LINES OF TEXT!
    If you get tired of skinny paragraphs and lines running off the tradi-
tional 80-character x 25-line display, you can switch to the Victor's
132-character x 50-line display, complete with fully legible upper and lower
case characters, with descenders.  (That, alone, is enough to sell it to us
word-junkies.)
    IBM's character display matrix is 9x14.  Sirius' is 10x16 or 16x16.  The
character set is loaded into user-accessible RAM, so, if ya don't like what
you see, ya can change it to suit your palate.
    Unlike IBM, the Sirius unit does not currently support color (a decision
that was debated long and hard), but the system has all the hooks to add
color later.  Our impression is that they felt that (a) their marketplace
is the business market, to which color is less useful than for home and
educational computing, (b) it's very difficult to do really useful things,
in an information sense, with color, and (c) hi-res color monitors capable
of supporting those great graphics and 132x50 text displays cost lots!

1.2 MEGABYTE FLOPPY DISK DUET
    The 9000 comes with dual 5 1/4 " single-sided floppies, like the IBM.
Unlike the IBM, which can store 163K [per drive], the Victor system packs
1.2 megabytes into those two on-line minifloppies.

CP/M-86 & MSDOS
    Like the IBM pc, the Victor system offers both CP/M-86 (available right
now - IBM's is expected soon), and Microsoft's also-IBM DOS.  Unlike IBM,
both MSODS and CP/M-86 come with the system - CP/M is an option with IBM.
    And there is the usual package of support software, e.g. a VisiCalc
clone (VisiClone?) called VictorCalc from Image Systems, a Select editor, etc.

THE FUTURE IS VERY SOON
    Oh, yes, Victor will almost certainly be offering a Winchester and an
SMD interface before the end of '82, and very probably a medium-speed
networking facility (say, 1 to 2 megabit bandwidth).  We suggest that Vic-
torites also watch for a C compiler and a UNIX operating system licensed
from Bell Labs as yet another 1982 option (installed and supported by one
of the best unixizers in the business).

ORANGES AND APPLES - HOW MUCH?
    The Victor/Sirius system with dual floppies (1.2M), screen (80x25,
132x50 and 800x400), 128K of memory (that's minimum), MSDOS and CP/M-86
lists for $4995, a price that might be haggled once the supply pipe
begins to fill.
    In this apples-with-oranges comparison, an IBM system with dual
floppies (326K), screen (80x25 and 640x200), 48K of memory and MSDOS
is $3525, available from list-price-only dealers.

from: Silcon Gulch Gazette, January 1982, page 2, by Jim C. Warren, Jr.

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