Texas Instruments TI-99/4A
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The Texas Instruments TI-99/4A was an early home computer, released in June 1981, originally at a price of $525 USD. The TI-99/4A was an enhanced version of the less-successful - and quite rare - TI-99/4 model released in late 1979 at a price of $1,150. The TI-99/4A added an additional graphics mode, "lowercase" comprised of small capitals, and a full travel keyboard. Its predecessor, the TI-99/4, featured a calculator-style chiclet keyboard and lacked any provision for lowercase text.
Available peripherals included a 5¼" floppy disk drive, an "RS-232" card comprising two serial ports and one parallel port, a "P-Code" card for PASCAL support, a thermal printer, an acoustic coupler, and a 32KB memory expansion card.
In the early 1980s, TI was known as a pioneer in speech synthesis, and a plug-in speech module was also available for the TI-99/4 and 4A (and was very popular). Speech synthesizers were offered free with the purchase of a number of cartridges and were used by many TI-written video games (notable titles offered with speech during this promotion were Alpiner and Parsec). This synthesizer used a variant of linear predictive coding and had a vocabulary built-in. The original intent was to release small cartridges that increased the device's built in vocabulary, but the success of the text to speech system in the Terminal Emulator II cartridge cancelled that plan. (Most speech synthesizers still shipped with a door that opens on top, although very few have the connector inside. There are no known speech modules in existence for those few units with the connector.) In many games, although mostly those produced by TI, the speech synthesizer had relatively realistic voices. As an example, Alpiner's speech included male and female voices and could be quite sarcastic when the player made a bad move.
Many of the peripherals came in two forms, a card (encased in cast aluminum) which plugged into the bulky "Peripheral Expansion System" (usually known among TI owners as the Peripheral Expansion Box or "PEB"), an [eight slot chassis made of two plies of thick-gauge steel] and containing its own linear power supply and 5¼" floppy bay. Each card also had its own "access light", an LED which would blink or flicker when the card was being used by software. Another unique feature of the Peripheral Expansion System was that the section of the power supply which powered the card slots was unregulated - each card had on-board regulators for its own requirements, thus reducing power consumption on a partially-loaded PEB and allowing for future expansion cards which might have unusual voltage requirements. The alternate expansion method was a 'sidecar' version which plugged into the side of the console, originating before the conception of the PEB. These 'sidecar' expansion units could be connected together in a continuing chain, but could rapidly occupy an entire desk and cause crashes and lockups due to the large numbers of connectors on the system's buses.
Early models (the TI-99/4, identified by its keyboard and "(C)1979 TEXAS INSTRUMENTS" on the title page) included a built-in equation calculator, but in the 99/4A ("(C)1981 TEXAS INSTRUMENTS") this feature was discontinued. All consoles included TI BASIC, a strict ANSI-compliant BASIC programming language interpreter which was largely incompatible with the more popular Microsoft BASIC. Later consoles, identified by "(C)1983 TEXAS INSTRUMENTS V2.2" on the title page, also removed the ability for the system to execute ROM-based cartridges, locking out third-party manufacturers such as Atarisoft.
The system also supported saving and loading to two cassette drives through a dedicated port, and had a joystick port that supported two digital joysticks, which TI referred to as "wired remote controllers". Aftermarket adapters were available which allowed the use of two Atari-compatible joysticks. Composite video and audio were output through another port on NTSC-based machines, and combined by an external RF Modulator for use with a television. PAL-based machines output a more complex component-like signal which is also modulated externally.
The TI-99/4 series holds the distinction of being the first 16-bit personal computer. The TI-99/4A had a 16-bit TMS9900 CPU running at 3.3 MHz. The TMS9900 was based on TI's range of TI990 mini computers. There's some discussion about whether it should be recognized as an early RISC processor, but in truth it had very few of the features traditionally associated with RISC - it had a rich instruction set, a complex fetch/decode/process/store architecture (which required external support from the clock), extremely variable instruction timing and size, and a rich selection of addressing modes. Using the more modern differentiator of register-based or memory-based architecture, the 9900 clearly falls into the memory-base.
One feature that some have looked at as either being inspired by, or alternately inspiring, RISC processors was the concept of 'Workspaces'. Only the Program Counter, Status Register, and Workspace Pointer registers were on the chip, all work registers were kept in RAM at an address indicated by the Workspace Pointer. 16 registers were available at any given time, and a context switch instruction which changed to another workspace automatically allowed fast context switches compared to other processors which may have had to store and restore the registers. To support this requirement on a machine which only had video RAM available, a 256-byte block of RAM called the "scratchpad" was included. This memory was placed directly on the 16-bit bus with no wait states and is the fastest RAM in the machine.
Like most machines of the day, the TI-99 series incorporated a Video Display Processor to handle the generation of its display. The Video Display processor in the 99/4 was a TMS9918. It lacked a bitmap mode, which was added in the 99/4A. The VDP in the American 99/4A was the TMS9918A (which gives the machine the A in its name). In the European PAL consoles this was replaced with the TMS9929A which also powered MSX machines.
A unique feature of these VDP chips is that they contained hardware support for super-imposing video signals behind on-screen graphics. Although TI announced a Peripheral card called the Video Controller Card which allowed the control of select Laser Disk players, which could switch between the TI's display and the Laserdisc player, the 'genlock' capability of the 9918 was disabled in the design of the 99/4A and would require hardware modifications to use.
The VDP system, like most peripherals on the 99/4 series, was interfaced to the CPU memory bus via a 16-to-8 bit multiplexer. All accesses to it were executed 8 bits at a time. Although this impacted performance, it made it somewhat easier to upgrade the VDP when newer, relatively compatible chips were released by Yamaha. Peripherals from Mechatronics, and Michael Becker, simply called "80-column cards" included the Yamaha V9938 VDP which gives the 99/4A a top resolution of 512×424 in 16 colours or 256×424 in 256 colours. This also increased the VDP memory from 16K to a maximum of 192K, although only software explicitly written for the 9938 could take advantage of it.
As mentioned, except for the system ROMs and the 256-byte 'scratchpad', all memory and peripherals were connected to the CPU through a 16-to-8 bit multiplexer, requiring twice the cycles for any access and introducing an additional wait state. A popular user modification in later years involved "piggybacking" static RAM chips onto the console's 16 bit ROM chips, allowing a standard 32K RAM expansion without the wait state and approximately a 30% speed increase for many applications. Most hardware was based on the system clock, not the program execution speed, and the hardware access still ran through the 8-bit bus with the wait states intact, so this particular modification was not known to impact any peripherals.
The unusual architecture of the 99/4 series is documented to be due to the failure of the 9985, an 8-bit processor which was being created especially for the machine. When it was abandoned, the 16-bit 9900 was selected to replace it, and a great deal of 'glue logic' had to be added to fit the processor into the existing design, while no changes were made to take advantage of the 9900's strengths.
All TI-99 models, from the earliest TI-99/4 to the unreleased TI-99/2 and TI-99/8, included "plug and play" support for all peripherals. Device drivers (called "Device Service Routines", or DSRs) were built into ROMs in the hardware; when a new card was inserted, it was immediately available for any software which needed or wanted to use it. All device access utilized a generic file-based I/O mechanism, allowing new devices to be added without updating software to use it. However, each card ran at a hard-wired address on the CRU (Communications Register Unit) bus, and so multiple cards of the same type could not be supported without modification. The only official card known to be modifiable was the RS232 card, which supported two different base addresses. This allowed the system to support four RS232 ports and two parallel printer ports.
Most hobbyist created cards released after TI's exit from the hardware business included switches to set the base CRU address.
VDP RAM was also used for temporarily storing users' BASIC programs. BASIC was implemented on the TI-99 series using a second interpreted language called Graphics Programming Language, or GPL. The GPL interpreter resided in the ROMs and took control of the machine at power-up, and was very close to the native 9900 machine code, adding instructions to transparently access the different types of memory in the machine and perform higher level functions such as memory copy and formatted display.
The TI minicomputer inspired architecture of the TMS9900 series meant that the "Workspace" of registers currently in use were stored in main memory. Because static RAM was also very expensive in the early 80's, TI only gave the machines 256 bytes of fast "scratch pad" RAM where register workspaces could be stored.
The same VDP was used in the MSX and ColecoVision machines. Further upgrade chips, the 9938 and 9958, were produced by Yamaha based on TI's design. Boards were created that took advantage of these new chips to upgrade the graphics capabilities of the TI-99/4A. The 9938, the more common of the two upgrades, allowed 512 * 424 pixels and 16 colours, or 256 * 424 and 256 colours. These upgrades were not a simple drop-in and replace, however, a small board including additional RAM (at a minimum) was required. In addition, although the chips were largely software compatible, certain bugs in the ROMs caused compatibility issues with the new chips. However, these were all worked around and the upgrade boards were very popular with those who obtained them.
Some of the most popular TI-99/4A games included Parsec, TI Invaders, Munch Man, and Car Wars.
In February 1983, TI lowered the price to $150 and was selling the computers at a loss. And in June 1983, TI released a redesigned beige cost-reduced version that it sold, also at a loss, for $99. TI lost $100 million in the second quarter of 1983 and $330 million in the third quarter. In October 1983, TI announced it was exiting the home computer business.
A total of 2.8 million units were shipped before the TI-99/4A was discontinued in March 1984.
The TI-99/4A was technologically a competitive computer, offering more memory and more advanced graphics capabilities than the Commodore VIC-20 and in some regards rivaling the Commodore 64, which was aimed at a higher point in the market. However, a number of elements of its design attracted criticism: All peripherals plugged directly into the right-hand side of the unit (unless the user purchased the expensive and heavy Peripheral Expansion Box), which caused the computer to not fit well on top of a desk if a user added many peripherals besides a tape drive and a printer. In addition, the 48-key keyboard layout didn't match that of a typewriter very closely, and there was (at the time) no option for an 80-column display. The keyboard and display limitations made it unpopular for word processing.
However, the 99/4A's biggest drawback was its limited software library. TI closely controlled both hardware and software production for the machine, which resulted in a software library of around 300 titles and few of the big-name hits available for other computers of its day. No official technical documentation was released until the "Editor/Assembler" assembly language development suite was released in 1981; no system schematics were ever released to the public until after TI had discontinued the computer. By comparison, the VIC-20, whose history paralleled the TI-99/4 series except its hardware and software development was completely open (Commodore even included schematics in the owner's manual, allowing anyone to build hardware for the machine), had a library of more than 700 titles.
As a result, the TI-99/4A found itself selling for around the same price as the VIC-20, even though it was much more expensive to manufacture. It is worth noting that Texas Instruments and Commodore each owned their own IC fabrication facilities, allowing creation of custom ICs to combine functions of smaller ICs. Commodore used this aggressively to reduce the cost of their consoles, while TI continued to use off the shelf components and making only relatively small revisions to their motherboards. Commodore also made other cost-cutting changes including using aluminized cardboard to build RF shields for some of their systems. Texas Instruments never followed suit, electing instead to continue to use the highest quality components and materials with the unfulfilled hope that the marketplace would recognize it.
There was also a portable sibling to the TI-99/4A. Dubbed the [CC40 (Compact Computer 40)], it was a battery-powered compact with an LCD display and a version of TI BASIC. It also pioneered TI's HexBUS interface, a high speed serial expansion port similar in concept to USB. The HexBUS peripherals were compatible with all members of the TI-99 family; CC40 cartridges were not.
In 1987, the "Turbo XT" was introduced by Triton. Though rare, it allowed a TI-99/4A and an XT to share the same desktop space, though without sharing such things as memory or disk drives. Pictures of this unusual peripheral are available [here]. The Turbo XT had at least two serious failings - first, it extended the use of the TI's already marginal keyboard to the XT whereas the reverse would have probably been far more marketable; second, it did not allow the TI to share or use resources with the XT (custom BIOS might have allowed the XT to serve as ramdisk, diskette controller/drives and serial ports).
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The TI-99/4A's CPU, motherboard, and cartridge ("Solid State Software Module") slot were built into a single unit with the keyboard. The power supply regulator board (linear in early systems, switching in later systems) was housed below and in front of the cartridge slot under the sloped area to the right of the keyboard. VDP RAM and GPL
Texas Instruments engineers afforded the TI99/4A's graphics coprocessor, a TMS9918A 16K of VDP (Visual Display Processor) RAM, stored in DRAM with the VDP handling refresh. This was the primary RAM in the unexpanded console and the maximum that the VDP supported.Graphics Read-Only Memory
Graphics Read-Only Memory was another set of memory accessed a single byte at a time through a dedicated memory port, and were auto-incrementing read-only devices. (There is also support in the console for 'GRAM', simulators for which were created by third parties later.) As there was no realistic amount of RAM addressable by the CPU, machine code programs could not be loaded unless more RAM was added in the form of either the 32 KB expansion card or the 4 KB "Mini Memory" module. Because of these, the TI-99 series gained a reputation for being quirky and eccentric, which endeared it to some and maddened others. Many people who had only experienced TI BASIC also considered it very slow, although assembly programs actually managed fairly good speed despite the hardware issues to overcome.Games
History
Initially, the TI-99/4A was reasonably successful, and it has been estimated that it had about 35% of the home computer market at its peak. However, TI quickly found itself engaged in a price war, particularly with Commodore International, and was forced to lower the computer's price in order to compete. By August 1982, the computer was still losing shelf space. TI offered a $100 rebate, which caused spokesman Bill Cosby to quip about how easy it was to sell a computer if you paid people $100 to buy one.Successors and clones
At the time they left the home computer market, TI had been actively developing two successors to the TI-99/4A. Neither actually entered production, though several prototypes of each are in the hands of TI-99/4A collectors. Both machines were to feature the TMS9995 CPU and would therefore have been substantially faster than the original TI-99/4A, and both were to use TI's "HexBUS" serial interface (which was available as an option on the TI-99/4A and could be viewed as a prototype for today's ubiquitous USB - the link for the TI-99/8 includes some images of HexBUS peripherals). Technical specifications
See also
External links
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