History of computing in Romania

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This article describes the history of computing in Romania.

HC family[]

The Romanian computers (HC 85, HC 85+, HC 88, HC 90, HC 91 and HC 2000) were clones of Sinclair ZX Spectrum that were produced at from 1985 to 1994. HC 85 was first designed at Institutul Politehnic București by Prof. Dr. Ing. (in laboratory), then redesigned at ICE Felix (in order to be produced at industrial scale). Their operating system was a BASIC interpreter.

aMIC[]

was a Romanian microcomputer designed by Prof. Adrian Petrescu at Institutul Politehnic București in 1982, later produced at Fabrica de Memorii in Timișoara.

MARICA and DACICC[]

MARICA and the DACICC family (DACICC-1 and DACICC-200) were Romanian computers produced in 1959–1968 at T. Popoviciu Institute of Numerical Analysis, Cluj-Napoca.

Felix series[]

was a Romanian IBM-PC compatible produced at in 1985–1990.

was a family of Romanian computers produced by from 1970 to 1978. They were similar to IBM/360; their operating system was SIRIS.

was a family of Romanian mini and microcomputers in 1975–1984.

CoBra[]

was a Romanian personal computer produced at I.T.C.I Brașov, in 1986.

Independent[]

was a series of Romanian minicomputers, manufactured from 1983 to 1989. They were compatible with DEC-PDP 11–34, running RSX-11M operating system. They were produced at ITC Timișoara, with memory chips also produced in Timișoara.

See also[]

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