Commodore 900

The Commodore 900 (also known as the C900, Z-8000, and Z-Machine) was a prototype microcomputer originally intended for business computing and, later, as an affordable UNIX workstation. It was to replace the aging PET/CBM family of personal computers that had found success in Europe as business machines. The project was initiated in 1983 by Commodore systems engineers Frank Hughes, Robert Russell, and Shiraz Shivji.[1] Manufacturing was to commence in 1985 at Commodore International's West Germany plant[2], but only fifty prototypes were made and sold as development systems before the project was cancelled.

Commodore 900
DeveloperCommodore
ManufacturerCommodore
TypeDesktop
Operating systemCoherent
CPUZilog Z8000

The C900 was a 16-bit computer based on the segmented version of the Zilog Z8000 CPU. It ran Coherent, a UNIX-like operating system. Two versions of the machine were developed: a workstation with 1024×800 pixels graphics, and a server with text-only display.

The C900's case is similar to the Amiga 2000's but slightly larger.

References

  1. Bagnall, Brian (2006). On the Edge: The Spectacular Rise and Fall of Commodore, Variant Press. Page 434. ISBN 0-9738649-0-7
  2. Commodore high-performance micros out: Unix-compatible C900 based on Zilog CPU, Computerworld, 6 May 1985, Page 57
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