The NEC PC-9801 (or the PC-98 for short) is a
Japanese microcomputer manufactured by
NEC. It first appeared in 1982, and employed an
8086 CPU. It ran at a
clock speed of 5 MHz, with two µPD7220 display controllers (one for text, the other for video graphics), and shipped with 128 KB of
RAM, expandable to 640 KB. Its 8-color display had a maximum resolution of 640×400 pixels. Its successor, the PC-9801E, which appeared in 1983, employed an
8086-2 CPU, which could selectably run at a speed of either 5 or 8 MHz. In the 80s, more than 60% of the PCs sold in Japan were PC98. In 1990, IBM Japan introduced
DOS/V which enabled to display Japanese text on ordinary IBM PC/AT's VGA adapter. After that, the fall and declining of PC98 began. The PC-9801's last successor is the
Celeron-based PC-9821Ra43 (with a clockspeed 433MHz), which appeared in 2000.
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