About: EXL 100

An Entity of Type: Home computer, from Named Graph: http://dbpedia.org, within Data Space: dbpedia.org

The EXL 100 is a computer released in 1984 by the French brand Exelvision, based on the TMS 7020 microprocessor from Texas Instruments. This was an uncommon design choice (at the time almost all home computers either used 6502 or Z80 microprocessors) but justified by the fact that the engineering team behind the machine (Jacques Palpacuer, Victor Zebrouck and Christian Petiot) came from Texas instruments.It was part of the government Computing for All plan and 9000 units were used in schools. The machine came with a BASIC version on cartridge named ExelBasic.

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dbo:abstract
  • The EXL 100 is a computer released in 1984 by the French brand Exelvision, based on the TMS 7020 microprocessor from Texas Instruments. This was an uncommon design choice (at the time almost all home computers either used 6502 or Z80 microprocessors) but justified by the fact that the engineering team behind the machine (Jacques Palpacuer, Victor Zebrouck and Christian Petiot) came from Texas instruments.It was part of the government Computing for All plan and 9000 units were used in schools. The design is unusual compared with similar machines of the time, as it had a separate central processing unit. Two keyboards are available: one with rubber keys and another with a more standard touch. Keyboard and joystick were not connected to the central unit by a cable but by infrared link, and are battery powered. Many extensions were available: modem, floppy disk drive and a 16 KB CMOS RAM powered by an integrated lithium battery.Its TMS 5220 sound processor was capable of French speech synthesis, another unusual feature. The machine came with a BASIC version on cartridge named ExelBasic. (en)
  • L’EXL 100 de la société française , détenue en majorité par la CGCT, est un ordinateur à base de microprocesseur de Texas Instruments ce qui était original, la quasi-totalité des ordinateurs familiaux de l'époque étant équipés de microprocesseurs de la série 6502 de MOS Technology ou du Zilog Z80. Il est sorti en 1984 et a fait partie du plan informatique pour tous. (fr)
dbo:cpu
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  • 68702270 (xsd:integer)
dbo:wikiPageLength
  • 5655 (xsd:nonNegativeInteger)
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  • 1124752123 (xsd:integer)
dbo:wikiPageWikiLink
dbp:cpu
dbp:cpuspeed
  • 4.9
dbp:developer
dbp:display
  • 40 (xsd:integer)
dbp:generation
  • 8 (xsd:integer)
dbp:graphics
dbp:lifespan
  • 1984 (xsd:integer)
dbp:media
  • Cassette tape, cartridges, floppy disk (en)
dbp:memory
  • 34 (xsd:integer)
dbp:os
  • None (en)
dbp:price
  • 3190 (xsd:integer)
dbp:releasedate
  • France: (en)
dbp:sound
dbp:successor
  • Exeltel (en)
dbp:type
dbp:unitssold
  • 9000 (xsd:integer)
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rdfs:comment
  • L’EXL 100 de la société française , détenue en majorité par la CGCT, est un ordinateur à base de microprocesseur de Texas Instruments ce qui était original, la quasi-totalité des ordinateurs familiaux de l'époque étant équipés de microprocesseurs de la série 6502 de MOS Technology ou du Zilog Z80. Il est sorti en 1984 et a fait partie du plan informatique pour tous. (fr)
  • The EXL 100 is a computer released in 1984 by the French brand Exelvision, based on the TMS 7020 microprocessor from Texas Instruments. This was an uncommon design choice (at the time almost all home computers either used 6502 or Z80 microprocessors) but justified by the fact that the engineering team behind the machine (Jacques Palpacuer, Victor Zebrouck and Christian Petiot) came from Texas instruments.It was part of the government Computing for All plan and 9000 units were used in schools. The machine came with a BASIC version on cartridge named ExelBasic. (en)
rdfs:label
  • EXL 100 (en)
  • EXL 100 (fr)
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