CBM 900

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The CBM 900 was a computer system by Commodore , which was developed as a server and workstation variant in the early 1980s, but was never mass-produced. As a CPU , a was Zilog Z8001 at 10 MHz is used, and the main memory with 512 KB RAM equipped; whereby this could be expanded to up to 2 MB. The MOS VDC 8563 , which was later used in the C128 , was developed as a graphics or video chip . The prototypes had a 20 MB hard drive and ran the Coherent operating system .

The computer never went into production, among other things because Commodore took over the Amiga company at that time and brought more powerful alternatives to the C900 into the race with the computers sold under this brand, especially the Amiga 1000 and Amiga 2000 . The housing design is only apparently identical to that of the Amiga 2000 , not least because it is somewhat larger.

Floppy disks

  • Coherent 0.7.3
    • VOL 1 06/26/85
    • build / boot
    • low - resolution
  • Coherent 0.7.3
    • VOL 2 06/26/85
  • Coherent 0.7.3
    • VOL 3 06/26/85

See also

Web links