Compact Computer 40 Explained

Compact Computer 40
Developer:Texas Instruments
Manufacturer:Texas Instruments
Type:Notebook computer
Cpu:TMS70C20 @ 2.5 MHz
Memory:6 KB

The Compact Computer 40 or CC-40 is an early notebook-sized computer developed by Texas Instruments. It started development in 1981,[1] and was released in March 1983 for US$249. The CC-40 has a single-line 31 character LCD display, weighs 600g and is powered by an AC adapter or can operate for 200 hours on four AA batteries. Memory is not erased by turning the unit off; it can retain data for several months. The CC-40 lacks a way to store data more permanently. Software was only available on cartridge or by typing programs into its built-in BASIC interpreter. The BASIC interpreter is similar but not identical to that of the TI-99/4A.

The CC-40 uses TI's TMS70C20 CPU, an 8-bit microprocessor that runs at 2.5 MHz. The system has 6 kilobytes of Random Access Memory (expandable to 18 KB), and 34 KB of Read Only Memory. Peripherals can be connected via a Hexbus port: an 80 column printer, printer/plotter, RS-232 interface, and modem.[2] A licensed version of the Exatron Stringy Floppy as a digital "Wafertape" unit depicted on the computer's box was only released as a prototype, reportedly because it proved too unreliable.[3]

Development

The Compact Computer 40 was developed under the internal codename "Lonestar".[4]

Reception

BYTE heavily criticized the CC-40, noting that "there's no clock. No file system. Only one BASIC program at a time can reside in memory, and the user can only work with about 5200 bytes of that. And the keyboard is vile". It also noted the lack of any external storage because the TI Wafertape drive was not available, and the complete lack of software. The review suggested that the computer should be considered a "dandy scientific calculator" since good programmable calculators cost about the same as the CC-40's price, but that otherwise "virtually all of its competition vastly outstrips it in power and features", including the TI-99/4A.[5]

In a review for Creative Computing, Joe Devlin wrote, "The permanent memory and powerful Basic exceed the capabilities found in most hand-held computers." He recommended it as a convenient tool for learning BASIC or for someone who frequently does calculations with formulas.

In 1983, MicroKids magazine included the CC-40 on a list of "Top 10 Great Gift Ideas."[6]

Legacy and Planned Software/Hardware

Planned Software

According to TI Engineer Stephen Reid, these are the software titles that would have been released for the CC-40 had the Hexbus Waftertape drive been reliable and released. Each program (or combination of programs) would have been available to be purchased on Waftertape at a retail outlet.

All code to the below programs was authored and finalized. These programs are archived at Texas Instruments, and some documentation is also written. The programs were never released to the public due to the failure of the Hexbus Waftertape drive.

Wafertape Library for the CC-40!Control Charts!Dynamics!Electrical Engineering!Extras!Inventory (control and management)!Non Parametric Stat!PDraw (pen plotter drawing)!Photo (darkroom and film exposure/processing)
PCHARTCIRCLEAMPCONVERSNEOQCHISQRCEDITBW
P OR NP COLLIDEBIPOLEKNMATIC1LATECOCHRANEDITCOLOR
RANGEINERTIACOILKNMATIC2OVHDFRIEDMANPERTRANDEPTH
STDDVLINEARDELTAORBITPGMTGAUSSPLOTTERSEXTUBE
UCHARTPROJFIELDRTKRUSWALLTDEEFLASH
U OR CROTATELDFLOWSUMRANKTIMEDLRATIO
SHMPOWERTOTALRANKSUBSLENS
VECTORRADIALRUNS
VOLTRXC
TAU
TOLLIM
!Pipe (Flow, etc)!ProdPlan (production planning)!Profit!Regression!Samples!Solar!Thermodynamics!WaferTape Utiliities*
DWEBALATCFADVAOQLFCHARTBDPOINTCARTDIR
EPMBREAKIRRAAUTOCONTGAINFLOWCARTINIT
GLPSCAPIRRBCHECKDESHEATHEATCAPCARTLOAD
HCMCPMDSCORRSAMHEATEXCPENGCARTSAVE
HTCCVNPVACORR2UNITHTCPSYCARTSAVX
HTIPRATESNPVBCUBICVARISOLECOREACTDIR
HWFTIMEEXPZENITHSRKFILECOPY
WPDTVMLTSTEAMPROG
MLT2SUBPROG
NLTAPECOPY
WAFER (utility)
*This was for building cartridge images, etc. These were mostly ram-loadable assembly utilities.

Planned Hardware

The Hex-Bus interface was also available for the TI-99/4A as an unreleased prototype expansion peripheral. It was built into the prototypes of the cancelled TI-99/2 and TI-99/8 computers. An improved model, the CC-40 Plus, was in the final stages of development and included a cassette port. The project was canceled when Texas Instruments discontinued the 99/4A and exited the home computer market. Most of the architecture of the CC-40 Plus was reused in the Texas Instruments TI-74. The TI-74 changed the physical footprint of the Hexbus port and rename it Dockbus.[7] Old Hexbus peripherals could even be used on the TI-74 with an adapter.

Also in development was the Compact Computer 70 (codenamed "Superstar"). The CC-70 was to have four cartridge ports, more RAM, and an 8 x 80 display with graphics capability. The CC-70 mock-up from Calculator division lead CB Wilson showed up on eBay in 2020. Engineer Steven Reid has stated that the first run of chips for the CC-70 failed, and TI discontinued the Home Computer division in October 1983 before the chip issues could be corrected.[8]

References

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: acadiel . CB Wilson Related Documents - Lonestar . AtariAge . November 2020 . 7 November 2022.
  2. Web site: acadiel . CB Wilson - CB Wilson early 80s documentation . AtariAge . 24 October 2020 . 6 December 2022.
  3. Web site: acadiel . CB Wilson - TI 99 related Documents . Atariage . November 2020 . 6 December 2022.
  4. Web site: acadiel . CB Wilson - TI-99 related documentation . AtariAge . November 2020 . 6 December 2022.
  5. News: Epson's HX-20 and Texas Instruments' CC-40 . BYTE . September 1983 . 20 October 2013 . Ramsey, David . 193.
  6. Kuhn . Paul . Top 10 Great Gift Ideas . MicroKids . December 1983 . 1 . 1 . 60 .
  7. Web site: Good . Charles . A Compendium of CC-40 Information . WHTech TI Archive.
  8. Web site: acadiel . CB Wilson - TI99 related Documentation . Atariage . November 2020 . 6 December 2022.