Hector (microcomputer)Hector (or Victor Lambda) are a series of a microcomputers produced in France in the early 1980s. In January 1980, Michel Henric-Coll founded a company named Lambda Systems in Toulouse, that would import a computer (produced by Interact Electronics Inc of Ann Arbor, Michigan[1][2]) to France. The computer was sold under the name of Victor Lambda.[3][4] Lambda Systems went bankrupt in July 1981, along with Interact. In December 1981, Micronique,[5] an electronic components company based in southern Paris, acquires the rights to the Victor Lambda. In 1982, Victor Lambda Diffusion, a subsidiary, distributes the Victor Lambda. The first machines built in the United States were not a success, and the following models were designed and produced in France at the headquarters of the Micronique company. The company uses the slogan: "The French Personal Computer".[6] In 1983, the Victor is renamed Hector,[7] to avoid confusion with the machines from the Californian company Victor Technologies (formerly Sirius Systems Technology). The last model introduced was the Hector MX, with production of the series ending in 1985.[6] The series was not successful, due to the focus on the French market, intense competition from Amstrad machines and high prices.[8][9] ModelsVictor LambdaThe Victor Lambda was a rebranded Interact Home Computer[10][11][2][12](also called The Interact Family Computer 2[13]) microcomputer. Introduced in 1980, it had a chiclet keyboard and built-in cassette recorder for data storage.
Hector 1 (Victor Lambda 2)The Hector 1[7][14][15][16] was a 1983 computer, based on the Victor Lambda. Initially sold as Victor Lambda 2[7][17][18] it was renamed to avoid trademark confusion. Also known as Hector 16K. More than 100 games were published for this machine.[19] It was eventually considered as an entry level machine.[20] Specifications:[14]
Hector 2 HR (Victor Lambda 2HR)The Hector 2HR[21][22][23] is a 1983[24] computer with a Zilog Z80 processor, 16KB of ROM and 48KB of RAM. Initially sold as Victor Lambda 2HR, it was renamed avoid trademark confusion.[25] Graphics were improved, with a resolution of 243x231 in 4 colors, and 40x23 character text.[26] It has an built-in cassette recorder and an optional disk drive (DISK II). At launch there were sixty software titles available on tape.[26] It was considered as a more serious machine for those wishing to program their own games.[20]
DISK II deviceThe "Disk II" is a dual external 5+1⁄4-inch floppy disk drive with a dedicated processor. The Hector processor would handle the screen, keyboard and printer, while the floppy drive processor would run CP/M and manage floppy disks. Communication took place via the bi-directional parallel port. Programming languagesThe programming language is not available in ROM but loaded at startup. This makes it possible to distribute several languages, with BASIC 80, Pascal MT+, Cobol 80, Fortran 77, Forth and Assembly being available. Hector 2HR+The Hector 2HR+,[28][29][30] also released in 1983, is similar to the previous model, but including the BASIC language in ROM[24] (thus freeing up more RAM memory for user programs). Specifications:[27]
Hector HRXThe Hector HRX,[31][32][33][34][35] also released in 1983, is similar to the previous model, but changes BASIC for a Forth language interpreter in ROM and features a 64KB RAM.[36] An early 1983 review mentioned as positive compatibility with existing Lambda II HR software, but pointed lack of high-profile titles like arcade game conversions.[37] It was considered as a professional machine, capable of running small business applications like text processors, spreadsheets and databases.[20] A 1985 review of the system praised the varied peripherals available, but again criticized the lack of software.[33] Specifications:[38]
Hector MXThe Hector MX,[39][40] released in 1985, is similar to the HRX but offers BASIC, Forth, Logo and Assembly as languages available in ROM.[41] Specifications:[41]
SoftwareSome software like Wordstar or Multiplan exists for this series of machines, along with many small games.[42][43] They are also compatible with the Interact Home Computer
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