Dynabyte -- History
Dynabyte come on to the scene around 1978 with, at the
time, a fairly sophisticated complete S-100 series of systems.
Right from the get- go they made it clear they were not targeting the
home/hobbyist community but instead the small business community. Their
machines were priced accordingly, being function for function amongst S-100
computers amongst the most expensive. Nevertheless their computers
were well designed and well made. That said, they seem to have left no
record of how they were founded or what happened to them. They were located
in Palo Alto CA, though the company was registered in Milpiatas (1977), CA.
The president was Michael Watt. At one point they had about 100 employees
with sales over $10M/year.
They made one basic S-100 system with differing names and internal complexity.
They all had a unique outward appearance typically represented by in the
picture below of their Dynabyte 5100 system. The family was an
upgradable microcomputer system that support 5.25" and 8" floppy drives, and
(later) a Winchester fixed disk. The later systems (the 5000 and 6000 series)
were are based on the Z80A and later a 8086 CPU, 64K to 1MB of RAM memory under
CP/M, and MP/M UNIX, BASIC4 or OASIS operating systems.
They also made Single board controllers (non-S100 bus) for industrial
applications.
Most of the early systems however (the DB series), contained a 4MHZ Z80 board with one parallel port and two
serial ports, a PROM board but typically only 32K of RAM (either static or
dynamic) and a single or double density floppy disk controller. All systems
were housed with a 12 slot S-100 motherboard. There were boxes with 5"
drives (called a DB8/2) , ones with 8" drives (called a DB8/4) and later
units with an internal hard disk (shown above).
They seemed to have put a lot of effort into developing an integrated
business software package with the system. Providing not only BASIC, COBOL
and FORTRAN but also accounting software.
I do not know what happened to them in the end.
Dynabyte
S-100 Boards
16K Dynamic RAM
16K Static RAM
32K Static RAM
CPU Board
Naked Terminal
Octaport
64K Dynamic RAM
This page was last modified
on
01/08/2011