Stratos (computer)

The Stratos was a Z80-based microcomputer introduced by Symbiotic Systems, Inc., in 1981.

Stratos
DeveloperSymbiotic Systems, Inc.
ManufacturerSymbiotic Systems, Inc.
TypeMicrocomputer
Release date1981 (1981)
Discontinued1983 (1983)
Operating systemCP/M 2.0
CPUZilog Z80 at 4 MHz
Memory64 KB conventional RAM, 16 KB programmable RAM, 2 KB EPROM

Background and development

The Stratos was designed by Stewart Earnest and Ray McKaig of Symbiotic Systems, Inc., a company originally based out of Woodland, California, and later relocated to Santa Cruz, California.[1] Symbiotic Systems previously released the Syncron 8, a S-100 bus–based computer running the Intel 8080 microprocessor and featuring a backplane motherboard with twenty card slots. The 8080 is housed on a card that features PROMs, one of which has a bootstrap loader allowing the user to load software via floppy disk or data cassette, while the other has a 512-KB PROM flashable by the user.[2] The Syncron 8 can take up to 12 KB of RAM and has a keyboard interface allowing users to directly interact with the computer without the need for a terminal.[3] A television could be used as a display for the computer with the use of a composite cable.[4] The Syncron 8 was regarded as a hobbyist or industrial computer.[5]

Specifications

The Stratos by contrast is a general-purpose, turnkey,[6] single-board computer, built from a six-layer printed circuit board and powered by a Zilog Z80 microprocessor clocked at 4 MHz. The computer comes with 64 KB of conventional RAM and 16 KB of additional RAM, the latter programmable as either disk-cache memory, as conventional memory (as the zero page in CP/M), as video memory, or as a RAM disk. The computer also comes with a 2-KB EPROM.[7] The computer's BIOS chip was custom written by Symbiotic Systems.[8]

The included software package comprises CP/M version 2.2, the Spellbinder word processor, either CBASIC or a Pascal compiler,[9] Reminder, Autophone, a personal financing application, and a medley of bespoke programs.[7] Reminder is a task-scheduling utility that took advantage of the computer's built-in real-time clock to executive certain programs and directives based on a 99-year calendar.[10] Autophone is an auto-dialer/answering utility that can issue DTMF signals or pulses through a telephone line to automatically (and repeatedly, if desired) place phone calls; it can also automatically answer incoming calls if it detects one on the line. One of the Stratos' bespoke programs is Font, a bitmapped font editor that can redefine any of the 256 memory-mapped 8-by-9-matrix characters of the on-screen font to any shape, either with a keyboard or with an optional light pen.[7]

The Stratos was optioned with either one or more 5.25-inch or 8-inch floppy disk drives.[11] It can address up to 5 MB of floppy storage.[9] The computer's power supply unit is switched-mode and was reported to run at 80 percent efficiency in 1981, negating the need for internal fans.[10] The system unit and included keyboard are housed in a teak enclosure.[6] The computer's lack of electromagnetic shielding reportedly made the computer prone to radio-frequency interference.[12]

Release and reception

The Stratos was released in September 1981 for at least $6350; the price was higher depending on the configuration.[11] The computer was previously previewed at the 6th West Coast Computer Faire in June 1981, where Marlin Ouverson, editor of Dr. Dobb's Journal, wrote that its real-time clock and 16 KB of programmable RAM "set it apart from other CP/M compatible systems".[8] The computer saw modest industrial use, with a real estate company in Santa Cruz using it to generate income analysis reports of their clientele,[13] while a book publisher and printing broker out of San Francisco used the Stratos to compose and design brochures.[14] The computer continued to be sold until 1983, when Symbiotic went out of business.[15]

Citations

References

  • Fitzgerald, Mark (July 1982). "Clients, Accountants Combine to Customize Number Crunching". Personal Computing. Hayden Publishing Company. 6 (7): 48–50 via the Internet Archive.
  • Nadeau, Michael (2002). Collectible Microcomputers. Schiffer Book for Collectors (Illustrated ed.). Schiffer Publishing. p. 122. ISBN 9780764316005 via Google Books.
  • Ouverson, Marlin (June 1981). "Editorial". Dr. Dobb's Journal. People's Computer Company. 6: 3 via the Internet Archive.
  • Rao, Guthikonda V. (1982). Microprocessors and Microcomputer Systems. Van Nostrand Reinhold. ISBN 9780442256265 via the Internet Archive.
  • Staff writer (September 1981a). "Single-board microcomputer supplies fast video and disc". Computer Design. PennWell Publishing. 20 (9): 70 via the Internet Archive.
  • Staff writer (September 1981b). "The Stratos". Byte. McGraw-Hill. 6 (9): 441 via the Internet Archive.
  • Staff writer (October 5, 1981c). "InfoWorld Hardware Review: Systems". InfoWorld. CW Communications. 3 (20): 41 via Google Books.
  • Staff writer (March 14, 1982). "Real Estate Investment Corporation Opens". Santa Cruz Sentinel: 62 via Newspapers.com.
  • Stephenson, Linda (September 1981). "80K Stratos System, Typewriter/Printer, MiniFrame from MicroDaSys, 68,000 Micros". Kilobaud Microcomputing. Wayne Green, Inc. V (9): 214–216 via the Internet Archive.
  • Syncron 8: The Advanced Microcomputer System. Symboitic Systems. March 1977 via the Internet Archive.
  • "Symbiotic Systems, Inc". OpenCorporates. n.d. Archived from the original on December 15, 2022.
  • Towers, T. D. (1982). Towers' International Microprocessor Selector. Tab Books. ISBN 0830617167 via the Internet Archive.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.