Jump to content

Epson HX-20

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected from HX-20)
Epson HX-20
The Epson HX-20
Also known asHC-20
ManufacturerEpson
TypeNotebook computer
Release dateJuly 1982; 42 years ago (July 1982)[1][2][3]
Introductory priceUS$795 (today $2430)
CPUTwo Hitachi 6301 CPUs at 614 kHz
Memory16 KB RAM expandable to 32 KB
32 KB ROM expandable to 64 KB
Display4 lines x 20 characters LCD
Graphics120 × 32-pixel
InputFull-transit keyboard
Powerrechargeable nickel-cadmium batteries
DimensionsA4 Sized
MassApproximately 1.6 kg

The HX-20 (also known as the HC-20) is an early laptop released by Seiko Epson in July 1982. It was the first notebook-sized portable computer,[4][5] occupying roughly the footprint of an A4 notebook while being lightweight enough to hold comfortably with one hand at 1.6 kilograms (3.5 lb) and small enough to fit inside an average briefcase.[6]

Despite praise from journalists for its technical innovations, the computer was not a commercial success outside of Japan. Radio Shack's TRS-80 Model 100 (the American version of a Kyocera notebook), released in 1983, is thus credited as the first commercially successful notebook computer.[7]

History

[edit]

The concept behind the HX-20 was first devised in July 1980 by Yukio Yokozawa, who worked for Suwa Seikosha, now the Seiko Epson subsidiary of the Japanese Seiko Group, receiving a patent for the invention.[8] It was announced in 1981 as the HC-20 in Japan,[1] and was introduced by Epson in North America as the HX-20 at the 1981 COMDEX computer show in Las Vegas, where it drew significant attention for its portability.[9] It had a mass-market release in July 1982, as the HC-20 in Japan[1] and as the Epson HX-20 in North America.[2]

Features

[edit]
The Epson HX-20 in its transport case with two spare paper rolls

Epson advertised the HX-20 with a photograph and photo editing of the computer on two facing magazine pages with the headline "Actual size".[10]

With a footprint about the size of a piece of A4 paper, the Epson HX-20 features a full-transit keyboard, rechargeable nickel-cadmium batteries, and a built-in 120 × 32-pixel LCD which allowed 4 lines of 20 characters. It features a calculator-size dot-matrix printer, the EPSON BASIC programming language, two Hitachi 6301 CPUs at 614 kHz[11] which is essentially an enhanced Motorola 6801,[12] 16 kB RAM expandable to 32 kB, two RS-232 ports at a maximum of 4800 bits/s for the first 8-pin DIN connector intended for modem or serial printer with the second port capable of 38400 bits/s using a 5-pin DIN connector which was mainly for use with external floppy drive and video display[11] an early concept of docking station, a 300 bit/s acoustic coupler was available,[11] built-in microcassette drive, barcode reader connector.[11]

The HX-20 uses a proprietary operating system, which consists of the EPSON BASIC interpreter and a monitor program, and weighs approximately 1.6 kg. The known colours of the machine are silver and cream, while some prototypes are dark grey. The HX-20 was supplied with a grey or brown carry case. An external acoustic coupler, the CX-20, was available for the HX-20, as was an external floppy disk drive, the TF-20, and an external speech synthesis Augmentative Communication Device (ACD), 'RealVoice'. Another extension was the serially connected 40 × 24 character video. It used a special protocol, EPSP,[13] which was also used by the external floppy disk drive. The battery life of the HX-20 was approximately 50 h running BASIC and less using the microcassette, printer or RS-232.[11] Data integrity could be preserved in the 4.0–6.0 V range.[11] The power supply was rated for 8 W.[11] Operating and charging it would tolerate 5–35 °C.[11] Data integrity could be preserved at −5–40 °C.[11] The HX-20 could be stored between −20–60 °C.[11]

The later, more popular TRS-80 Model 100 line, designed by Kyocera, owed much to the design of the HX-20.

Reception

[edit]

BYTE in September 1983 wrote that the HX-20, available in the United States for about a year, had been unsuccessful because of the lack of software or accessories. The review noted that Epson had included the formerly US$160 microcassette drive in the standard US$795 configuration, as well as bundling a simple word processor. BYTE praised the printer as "nothing short of amazing", but criticized the lack of an operating system for cassette storage and said that compared to the TRS-80 Model 100's display, "the HX-20 looks primitive".[14]

LCD

[edit]

The LCD is 120×32 pixels and is controlled by six μPD7227[15] LCD controller ICs each responsible for 40×16 pixels of the LCD. The μPD7227 uses a serial protocol and has two memory banks for switching between rows 0-7 and 8–15. It features multiple modes, including "Write", "Read", "AND", "OR" and "Character". The "character" mode draws characters from a built-in character map. Each bank is 40 bytes, with a bit 6 of the address determining the bank. Even though the address can be up to 127, nothing will happen when trying to access data outside the banks. If the pointer action in a command is set to decrement and the pointer is at 0, the pointer will wrap to 127.

Monitor

[edit]
Monitor entered via a trap

The Monitor program can be accessed via the main menu on startup by pressing 1, by typing the command "MON" in BASIC or by causing a trap, i.e. writing/reading to/from protected addresses or executing an illegal instruction. In the case of a trap, "Trap!" will be displayed in the Monitor and the user can use it for debugging.

When entering Monitor it shows a prompt on the first line, "Trap!" on the second line (if entered via a trap) and the CPU registers as they were right before the Monitor was entered on the third and fourth lines. These registers are A (Accumulator A), B (Accumulator B), X (Index Register), C (Condition Code Register), S (Stack Pointer) and P (program counter).

The monitor can be used for reading and writing memory, modifying CPU registers, running code at specific addresses in memory, saving/loading memory to/from a plugin option, etc. This is very useful for debugging programs written in machine code in difference to programs written in the EPSON BASIC programming language.

Commands

[edit]
Command Syntax Description
S (Set) S<addr> [old] [new] Writes the 8-bit value "new" (in hex) to 16-bit address <addr>. Entering only the address and pressing enter will make the old value at the address appear and the cursor put after the old value for entering a value.
D (Dump) D<addr> Dumps the values from addresses <addr> to <addr + 14> to the display.
G (Go) G<addr>,<breakpoint> Sets the programme counter to the 16-bit address <addr> and will return to Monitor before the breakpoint address <breakpoint> is executed.
X (Examine) X Allows the user to display and change the contents of each register. The RETURN key applies the changed value (if any) and jumps between registers. Typing a non-hexadecimal character exits this command.
R (Read) R<device>,<filename> Transfer data from an external storage to memory. <device> can be any of M (microcassette), C (external cassette) and P (ROM cartridge). The memory address is specified using the "A (Address)" command.
W (Write) W<device>,<filename> Transfer data from memory specified by the "A (Address)" command to an external storage. See "R (Read)" for more information. ROM cartridge is not supported by this command.
V (Verify) V<device>,<filename> Verifies data transferred to an external storage against the memory specified by the "A (Address)" command. See "R (Read)" for more information. ROM cartridge is not supported by this command.
A (Address) A Specify an address range for commands R, W and V. The user will be prompted with T (Top address), L (Last address), O (Offset value) and E (Entrypoint). Offset and entrypoint values are only used by the "W (Write)" and "V (Verify)" commands.
K (Key set) K<text> Enter a sequence of keys to be pressed automatically on power up (and reset). Press CTRL+@ to stop. A maximum of 18 characters can be entered and function keys counts as two characters.
B (Back) B Return to the procedure from which Monitor was called.

Memory map

[edit]
Start End Description
0000 001F Internal registers
0020 003F I/O select
0040 007F RTC registers + RAM
0080 3FFF RAM
4000 5FFF Used by expansion unit
6000 7FFF ROM #4 (Option ROM)
8000 9FFF ROM #3
A000 BFFF ROM #2
C000 DFFF ROM #1
E000 FFFF ROM #0

ROM #0 and #1 are known as the I/O ROMs, handling system reset and providing functions for using the LCD, keyboard, clock, printer, speaker, serial communication, etc. The I/O ROMs are equivalent to the BIOS in modern PCs. ROM #0 also contains the interrupt vector table at FFF0-FFFF. FFFE-FFFF determines what the program counter should be set to on power up or reset. In the standard set of ROMs for the HX-20, this value is E000, the start of ROM #0.

ROM #2 and #3 contains the BASIC interpreter. If the BASIC ROMs are removed from the motherboard, the BASIC option in the main menu will disappear, leaving only MONITOR. This is because ROM #3 contains a program header which is detected by the menu routines. This works the same for all user-created programs, except the program type is different.

The expansion unit added up to 16 KB of RAM and two ROM sockets. The latter could only be used by switching off the internal BASIC ROMS.[16]

Similar Epson models

[edit]
  • HC-80 (Japanese version of the PX-8)
  • HC-88 (Japanese version of the PX-8)
  • HX-40 (American version of the PX-4)
  • HX-45 (American version of the PX-4)
  • KX-1
  • PX-16 (IBM PC compatible portable, cartridges compatible with PX-4)
  • PX-4 (successor of the HX-20, with larger screen and CP/M compatible like the PX-8)
  • PX-8 (Geneva)
  • EHT-30, EHT-40

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b c "Shinshu Seiki/Suwa Seikosha HC-20". IPSJ Computer Museum. Retrieved 19 June 2019.
  2. ^ a b Michael R. Peres, The Focal Encyclopedia of Photography, page 306, Taylor & Francis
  3. ^ "Epson HX-20 laptop computer". Museum of Technology. Retrieved 9 September 2016.
  4. ^ Kent, Allen; James G. Williams, eds. (1990). Encyclopedia of Microcomputers. Vol. 6. Marcel Dekker. p. 298. ISBN 978-1-00-072330-4 – via Google Books.
  5. ^ s (November 22, 1999). "The Digital Century: The PC". PC World. IDG Publications. Archived from the original on April 24, 2021 – via CNN.
  6. ^ "Epson HX-20". Victoria and Albert Museum. n.d.
  7. ^ McCracken, Harry (August 6, 2012). "A 35th-anniversary salute to Radio Shack's TRS-80". CNN. Warner Bros. Discovery. Archived from the original on April 15, 2022.
  8. ^ FR2487094A1 patent: Notebook computer system small
  9. ^ Epson HX-20, Old Computers
  10. ^ Advertisement (December 1982). "Actual size". BYTE. pp. 260–261. Retrieved 19 October 2013.
  11. ^ a b c d e f g h i j HX-20 Operations Manual
  12. ^ jrok.om – Replacement CUS60, CUS63 and some CUS64
  13. ^ "C-20 PROTOCOL". 19 November 1982. Retrieved 19 June 2019.
  14. ^ Ramsey, David (September 1983). "Epson's HX-20 and Texas Instruments' CC-40". BYTE. p. 193. Retrieved 20 October 2013.
  15. ^ "NEC Electronics Inc. μPD7227 COMS, Intelligent, Dot Matrix LCD Controller/Drive" (PDF). Retrieved 2024-02-12.
  16. ^ Technical Support Document number 72a Archived 2018-09-25 at the Wayback Machine, Using the Epson HX-20 expansion unit
[edit]
pFad - Phonifier reborn

Pfad - The Proxy pFad of © 2024 Garber Painting. All rights reserved.

Note: This service is not intended for secure transactions such as banking, social media, email, or purchasing. Use at your own risk. We assume no liability whatsoever for broken pages.


Alternative Proxies:

Alternative Proxy

pFad Proxy

pFad v3 Proxy

pFad v4 Proxy