Computers for everybody - 1984 Buyer's Guide

The most obscure and weird (at least to Nothern European people) computers from the book mentioned above. Copyright Dilithium Press / Jerry Willis.
C4e1_01.jpg 40 KB Panasonic JR-200
C4e1_02.jpg 42 KB TRS-80 Model 4
C4e1_03.jpg 43 KB LOBO Max 80
C4e1_04.jpg 34 KB VTech Laser 3000
C4e1_05.jpg 45 KB Microprofessor MPF-II
C4e1_06.jpg 26 KB NEC TREK (PC-6000)
C4e1_07.jpg 25 KB Mattel Acquarius (huge diskdrive!)
C4e1_08.jpg 18 KB She's happy with her Tomy Tutor
C4e1_09.jpg 98 KB Timex Sinclairs
C4e1_10.jpg 56 KB Who's more famous now? Chaplin or IBM PC?
C4e1_11.jpg 38 KB LNW Model II
C4e1_12.jpg 33 KB SORD M5
C4e1_13.jpg 56 KB Vector 4 - straight out of a Sci-Fi movie
C4e1_14.jpg 49 KB Victor 9000 by the guy who designed 6502
C4e1_15.jpg 52 KB Apple III
C4e1_16.jpg 53 KB Televideo TS 1603
C4e1_17.jpg 32 KB North Star Advantage
C4e1_18.jpg 39 KB Intertec Superbrain II - wooo...
C4e1_19.jpg 36 KB Sony SMC-70 - days before PS2
C4e1_20.jpg 96 KB Take your Apple to the bed
C4e1_21.jpg 47 KB Microstandard M6000P - freaky!
C4e1_22.jpg 40 KB ZORBA - no, nothing to do with Greek music
C4e1_23.jpg 36 KB Compaq - their first!
C4e1_24.jpg 43 KB Osborne 1 - their first, the display was kinda.. emm.. small.. yeah, very small
C4e1_25.jpg 59 KB Commodore Executive 64
C4e1_26.jpg 34 KB Tomy Tutor
C4e1_27.jpg 37 KB Spectravideo SV-318, what's that in the back?
C4e1_28.jpg 83 KB Video Technology Laser 2001 with more proof that Salora Manager and Creativision DO have a converter to play Colecovision games..
C4e1_29.jpg 81 KB Franklin Ace 1000 and 1200
C4e1_30.jpg 34 KB Orange Plus Two