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Title | Description | |
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Cray Research | ||
World War II Items | ||
Digital Equipment Corporation | ||
Research Machines | ||
Atari | ||
Lynx Electronics | ||
Miscellaneous | Objects that are currently unbranded/missing parts and due to be identified. |
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Amstrad | ||
Tangerine Computer Systems | Tangerine Computer Systems was a British computer manufacturer which was founded in St. Ives Cambridgeshire in 1979. In 1983, it moved to Ely, Cambridgeshire and changed its name to Oric Products International. It went into receivership (for the second and final time) in Dec 1987. |
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Dell | Dell is a technology company that sells computer, computer peripherals, services mainly for the PC market as well as other electronics. The company was founded in 1984 by Michael Dell while he was still a university student at the University of Texas. The company started by selling PC compatible machines built from stock parts. Part […] |
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NeXT | NeXT computers was a technology company set up by Steve Jobs in late 1985 after leaving Apple. It designed a range of widely recognised computer workstations, as well as an operating systems that would eventually define and influence many of the most successful products Apple would make. The NeXT workstation was eventually introduced in 1988 […] |
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Whitechapel | Whitechapel Computer Works was a home-grown entry into the burgeoning field of Unix workstations during the early and mid-1980s. Funded with venture capital seed money and grant money from the UK government they were able to produce a marketable workstation within one year of founding. Unlike many companies who standardised on the Motorola 68000 CPU […] |