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Amstrad PCW



         


The Amstrad PCW series (Personal Computer Word processor) was British company Amstrad's versatile line of home/personal microcomputers pitched as a complete, integrated home/office solution.

Some models were also known as Joyce, especially in Germany; the name is that of a secretary of Alan Sugar, the founder of Amstrad.

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General features

The PCWs came as complete setups bundled with a full-size word processor keyboard, high resolution monochrome CRT monitor, printers of various types, 3" or 3½" floppy disk drive(s), LocoScript word processing software, and the CP/M operating system, including the Mallard BASIC programming language.

The machines were built around the 8-bit Zilog Z80 processor, running at 4MHz, and managed the relatively large amount of RAM using a technique known as bank switching (allowing access to more than the Z80's normal 16-bit address bus reach of 64KB). Although the PCWs were not at all designed as games machines, some games were in fact released for the platform, including such titles as Batman, Head Over Heels, and Bounder.

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PCW models

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Market impact

The PCW series was extremely successful in addressing its particular market. These machines were not sold as general-purpose computers but rather as simple word processors. They were not bought in preference to a PC or an Amiga; but rather in preference to an Amstrad CPC






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