Manufacturer | Peters Plus, Ltd. |
---|---|
Type | Home computer |
Release date | 1999 |
Discontinued | 2003 |
Operating system | Estex, Sinclair BASIC, TR-DOS |
CPU | Z84C15 @ 21MHz / 3.5MHz, Altera PLD |
Memory | 4MB RAM[1] |
Display | SECAM TV, CGA monitor; 320 x 256 with 256 colors, 640 x 256 with 16 colors, text mode 80 x 32 with 16 colors |
Sound | Beeper, AY-3-8910, 16-bit DAC |
Backward compatibility | ZX Spectrum |
The Sprinter (also called Peters Plus Sprinter or PPS [2][3]) is a microcomputer made by the Russian firm Peters Plus, Ltd.[4][5] It was the last ZX Spectrum clone produced in a factory.
It was built using what the company called a "Flex architecture", using an Altera PLD as part of the core logic. This allows the machine's hardware to be reconfigured on the fly [2] for different ZX-Spectrum models compatibility or its own enhanced native mode (set by default on boot and running the Estex operating system). This design is comparable to the design of Jeri Ellsworth's C-One reprogrammable computer.[citation needed]
The computer is built on a standard computer tower configuration, using standard floppy discs, CD-ROM and hard disk drives.[6][7]
Original source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sprinter (computer).
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