Videoton TV-Computer explained

TV-Computer
Aka:TVC
Developer:Videoton
Manufacturer:Videoton[1] [2] | family =| type = home computer| generation =| releasedate = around | lifespan =| price =| discontinued =| unitssold = around 12000| unitsshipped =| media =| os = TVC OS, UPM, BASIC| power =| soc =| cpu = Zilog Z80 compatible| memory = 32/64 kilobyte| storage =| memory card =| display = | graphics = 128×240/16 colors,
256×240/4 colors,
512×240/2 colors (b&w)| sound =| input =| controllers =| camera =| touchpad =| connectivity =| platform =| service =| dimensions =| weight =| topgame =| compatibility =| predecessor =| successor =| related =| website =

The TV-Computer (or TVC in short) is an 8-bit home computer which was manufactured by the Hungarian company Videoton around 1986. The computer was based on the Enterprise and had a built-in BASIC interpreter. Programs could be loaded via tape[3] or floppy. It had a built-in joystick and a keyboard with Hungarian letters and nine function keys.

There are three different models of the TVC:

The TVC has three graphical modes: 128×240/16 colors, 256×240/4 colors, and 512×240/2 colors (black and white). There was no text mode, only graphical. This made the computer a bit slow and smooth scrolling is pretty challenging (though there are examples for vertical and horizontal scrolling games nowadays).

Few programs existed for the computer. Many of these were written by dedicated amateurs and were distributed by mail.

It has two tape ports, one A/V, one RGB monitor, one RF connector, one Centronics printer port, one side (for program-modules - game cartridges) and four upper (computer internals are almost exposed) expansion ports and two joystick ports (compatible with Atari-style joysticks, but may have two buttons).

The four upper expansion ports made this computer very versatile. The official floppy solution was connected to one of these ports, the RS232 card also was plugged here. The classroom network card also used this port, the planned game card (with sprite capabilities) also would have used this port - unfortunately there are only some pictures about the prototype module and some documents mention it. Even a SID card was created, using a SID chip to enhance the TVC sound capabilities.

Current enhancements using these ports are: SD card reader, sound card (with 3 different sound chips), game card (+2 joystick ports +SN76489 sound chip + 4 built-in games), HDMI output with several FPGA cores (ofc including TVC), USB/PS2 mouse handling (and an unreleased gamecard with SID and sprite support) and many more.

Notes and References

  1. http://www.old-computers.com/MUSEUM/computer.asp?st=1&c=39 Videoton TV-Computer
  2. http://www.m-e-g-a.org/lost-gems-videoton-tvc/ Videoton TVC (TV-Computer) from 1983
  3. https://code.google.com/archive/p/tvc-tape/ Videoton TV Computer Tape File Converter