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The Aster CT-80, an early personal computer developed by the small Dutch company MCP (later renamed to Aster computers), was sold in its first incarnation as a kit for hobbyists. Later it was sold ready to use. It consisted of several Eurocard PCB's and a backplane.
Three models were sold. The first model looked like the later IBM PC, a rectangular base unit with two floppy drives on the front, and a monitor on top with a separate keyboard. The second incarnation was a much smaller unit the width of two 5 1/4" floppy drives stacked on top of each other, and the third incarnation looked like a flattened Apple ][ with a built-in keyboard.
All units ran much faster than the original TRS-80, at 4MHz, and the display supported upper and lower case, and hardware snow suppression (video ram bus arbitration logic). The floppy disk interface supported dual density, and disk capacities up to 800K.
The Aster also had the unique feature of supporting two fundamentally different internal architectures: when turned on without a boot floppy, or with a TRS-DOS floppy the Aster would be fully TRS-80 compatible. But when the boot loader detected a CP/M floppy the Aster would reconfigure its internal architecture on the fly to optimally support CP/M with 60K free RAM, and a 80 x 25 display. A capability it only shared with the LOBO Max-80 another TRS-80 clone.
With a special configuration tool it could reconfigure its floppy drivers to read and write the floppy's of about 80 other CP/M systems.
Most Aster CT-80's (about 10 thousand) were sold to schools for computer education, in a project first known as the "honderd scholen project" (one hundred schools project), but which later involved many more than just one hundred schools. MCP became this order from the Dutch government because their computer met all the demands, including the demand that the computes should be of Dutch origin and should be build in the Netherlands. Later however the Government turned around and gave 50% of the order to Philips and their P2000 homecomputer even though the P2000 did not meet all the demands and was made in Austria.
Aster computers was based in the small town of Arkel near the town of Gorinchem. Initially Aster computer b.v. was called MCP (Music print Computer Product) and was specialised in producing computer assisted printing of sheet music. They started selling electronc kits to hobbyist. Among those kits were alternative floppy disk drives for TRS-80 computers. Because the infamous TRS-80 expansion interface was very expensive they also developed their own alternative in the form of a floppy disk controller and printer interface that could be built right into the floppy disk enclosure. The lack of RAM expansion was solved by a service in which the 16K RAM chips would be replaced by 64K ram chips. While this went on MCP renamed itself to MCP CHIP but ran into problems with the German computer magazine CHIP, and had to return to its former name. At that time MCP did also sell imported home computers like the TRS-80, the Apple ][.
After designing their own fully functional replacement for the TRS-80 expansion interface (which was never commercialised) the company decided that the TRS-80 was a great computer but it lacked in several area's. The display logic and resulting display 'snow' was bothersome, the CPU speed could be improved, and the floppy disk capacity and reliability was low. Also the more intersting software offered for CP/M systems was lacking. So they decided they could do better and designed the Aster CT-80.
Soon the little shop became too small and they moved to a much larger factory bulding nearby, and started mass producing the aster for a period of a few years.
To enhance and modernise the Ater CT-80 the company also designed three alternative video display adapters to supplement or replace the TRS-80 compatible video card.
A hard disk interface was also in the works.
Finaly a replacement for the aging Z80 processor was also being developed in the form of an Intel 8086 board, and 16 bit memory boards.
Such replacements of main system components were possible because of the fact that the Aster CT-80 was designed to use a backplane that supported 8 and 16 bit processors, and used the modular Eurocard design.
Unfortunately none of these extensions to the system became available because the company folded before they came to frutition.
Perhaps the Aster computer inspired an other Dutch computer firm to name their computer after another typical Dutch flower the