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List of computer systems from Yugoslavia

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is a list of computer systems that were significantly or completely designed in the former Yugoslavia before the breakup of the country in 1990s. This list does not include imported foreign computers. Some of these were assembled as per original manufacturer's license. See history of computer hardware in Yugoslavia for more information.

Picture Type Model Manufacturer Origin Year Notes
Early 256 channel analyzer Ruđer Bošković Institute Croatia 1959 A two-metres high digital computer with logical circuits based on vacuum tubes; a 256-channel analyzer with memory, logic and programs that execute with million cycles per second
Early CER-10 Mihajlo Pupin Institute Serbia 1960 First computer designed and produced in SFRY
Early CER-2 Mihajlo Pupin Institute Serbia ~1960s
Early CER-20 Mihajlo Pupin Institute Serbia 1964 "electronic bookkeeping machine"
Early CER-200 Mihajlo Pupin Institute Serbia 1966
Early CER-202 Mihajlo Pupin Institute Serbia ~1960s

Early CER-22 Mihajlo Pupin Institute Serbia 1967 Intended for banking applications
Early CER-12 Mihajlo Pupin Institute Serbia 1971 "electronic computer for business data processing"
Early CER-203 Mihajlo Pupin Institute Serbia 1971 "electronic computer for business applications"
Hybrid HRS-100 Mihajlo Pupin Institute Serbia 1971 intended for scientific and technical research, modelling of complex dynamical systems in real and accelerated time
TIM-100 Mihajlo Pupin Institute Serbia 1985 Post office computer
TIM-001 Mihajlo Pupin Institute Serbia 1985 Development computer used in post offices
TIM-600 Mihajlo Pupin Institute Serbia
School TIM-011 Mihajlo Pupin Institute Serbia ~1987 HD64180-based computer with integrated green monochrome monitor, running CP/M with ZCPR3
TIM-40M Mihajlo Pupin Institute Serbia
ATLAS‑TIM AT 32 Mihajlo Pupin Institute Serbia
Home/School Galaksija Elektronika Inženjering Serbia 1983 Extremely popular build-it-yourself computer designed by Voja Antonić
Home/School Galaksija Plus - Serbia ~1985 Enhanced version of Galaksija
School/Home Hobby ZR-84 MICROSYS Beočin Serbia 1984
School/Home Pecom 32 Ei Niš Serbia 1985
School/Home Pecom 64 Ei Niš Serbia 1985
PC Lira 512 Ei Niš Serbia 1988 IBM PC XT compatible computer in Home computer form (mainboard is under the keyboard)
PC Lira AT Ei Niš Serbia 1989 IBM PC AT compatible computer
PC Lira 386 Ei Niš Serbia 1990 PC 386 compatible computer
PC ET-188 Novkabel Novi Sad Serbia 1985 IBM PC XT compatible computer
School/Home Misedo 85 Montex Ivangrad (Berane) Montenegro 1985 The clone of Tandy's TRS-80 Color Computer 2[1][2][3]
PLC PA512 Ivo Lola Ribar Serbia 1980
School Lola 8 Ivo Lola Ribar Serbia ~1982
PLC LPA512 Ivo Lola Ribar Serbia 1986
(none) theoretical NAR 1 (none) Serbia ? Created by Nedeljko Parezanović
(none) theoretical NAR 2 (none) Serbia ? Created by Nedeljko Parezanović
School Galeb PEL Varaždin Croatia 1984
School Orao PEL Varaždin Croatia 1984 Successor to Galeb
School Ivel Ultra Ivasim Croatia Apple II compatible. Also known as "Impuls 9020"
Home Ivel Z3 Ivasim Croatia Apple IIe compatible
1680 Iskradata Slovenia 1979
Mainframe 800 Iskra Delta Slovenia 1984 PDP-11/34 compatible
? Partner Iskra Delta Slovenia 1983
Triglav Iskra Delta Slovenia 1985 Option to swap between three processing units
Home Dialog Gorenje Slovenia ?
School/Engineering Vuk (prototype) Serbia 1988 Created by a group of students from Leskovac
School/Office/Army IRIS 8 IRIS - Energoinvest Sarajevo Bosnia and Herzegovina 1984 Apple II compatible.
PC IRIS PC16 IRIS - Energoinvest Sarajevo Bosnia and Herzegovina 1986 IBM PC AT compatible.

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Figure 5.5 Archived September 17, 2016, at the Wayback Machine Page 83, CoCo: The Colorful History of Tandy’s Underdog Computer, By Boisy G Pitre, Bill Loguidice
  2. ^ "Tandy Color Computer (CoCo) List". comments.gmane.org. Archived from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 17 January 2022.
  3. ^ "Računari nekad - Misedo 85". Lugram.net. Archived from the original on 2016-11-30. Retrieved 2016-09-04.