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Hardware
My First Computer The Amstrad PCW 8256 was a dedicated word processing computer (PCW stands for Personal Computer Wordprocessor). It was supplied with everything necessary, the word processor, printer and dedicated keyboard (with Cut, Copy, Paste and Print keys). You had to read 700 pages of documentation in order to master
it. It used 154 Kb RAM, and the remaining 102 Kb could be used as a virtual
disk. Each floppy disk, called a volume, could be divided in up to 8
sub-volumes. A particular page layout could be assigned to each of these
sub-volumes. The system displayed text in an odd but useful 90 x 32 resolution.
Of course as it was text-based software, you could not see exactly what would be
printed (no WYSIWYG here). Another drawback was that it was not possible to link
a document with an address book or a database, to generate multiple documents
(this was to be corrected with LocoMail, LocoFile and LocoScript 2 a few years
later). The 320k disks stored up to 90 pages of 2000 characters. The printer in full flow sounded like a second world war bren gun, I am sure the girl in the flat below me dreaded me printing anything more than a few lines.
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