Thomson
Thomson is a French High tech corporation who produce Weapons or HI-FI Electronic devices.
It used to produce 8-bit home computers in the 80's though sub-companies : SIMMIV (Société Internationale de Micro-Informatique et de Vidéo) also known as Thomson Micro. (1983-1989)
Despite those machines were litteraly whipped out by Amstrad in the French market, they remains a well known fail in France, and is still quite beloved in this country by those who knew them at school.
As we say : Proudly Merde in France.
Contents
History : a French phenomenon
Despite this they were quite common because in the 80's, the french governement started a program "Plan informatique pour tous" (computering for all plan) which consisted of equipping schools with computers networks.
As a result, a lot of Thomson computers were almost only sold to schools, appart from the few infortunates who got one instead of an Amstrad CPC.
Range and products
The Thomson 8bit computers are 6809E CPU based (1mhz)
They were released in a lot of models from 1983 to 1989.
While MO and TO models are uncompatible in software, most of the peripherals and Hardware were compatible.
2nd generation was almost fully retro-compatible with 1st generation but specific 2nd generation softwares couldn't run on 1st generation computers.
Those compatibilities issues were fatal to the range alongside the success of the Amstrad CPC in France.
First generation :
- MO5
- TO7 and TO7/70
Second generation :
- MO6
- TO8 and TO8D
- TO9 and TO9+
PC compatible :
- TO16
Funny Stuff :
- NanoReseau (Nano-Network) was a Network solution very "popular" as it was largely used in France's Schools. Actually some sort of Ethernet.
Palette and Video Modes
MO5 and TO7
And TO7/70.
The 1st generation of 8 bit thomson computers have a custom 4-bit RGBI palette of 16 colours.
Quite comparable with the ZX Spectrum palette, it is indeed done with a range of medium and clear tones instead of dark and medium. Also it is to notice that instead of having 2 Black slots (Spectrum), one was replaced by an Orange.
Resolution : 320x200x16 colours in 8x1 attributes (2 colours per attributes)
The Attribute system was comparable to MSX1 with attributes of 8x1 and 16 colours diplayable on screen (2 per attributes), but with a 320x200 resolution instead of a 256x200 resolution..
Graphically the MO5/TO7 are superior to ZX Spectrum in almost every way.
MO6 and TO8
Also TO9/TO9+.
The 2nd generation of 8 bit thomson computers got the addition of the 3 video modes of the Amstrad CPC/PLUS, alongside the "heritage" (legacy) 320x200x16 attribute based mode.
But the palette have been upgraded into a 4096 colours 12bit palette, the same as on the unreleased at the time Amstrad PLUS range (and of course the Commodore Amiga... and many other computers and consoles).
Those Bitmap video modes are :
- 160x200x16
- 320x200x4
- 640x200x2
Minus the lack of Hardware sprites and raster interrupt facilities (still doable on Thomson machines), the MO6 and TO8 are actually superior to the Amstard PLUS Range due to the attribute based mode in addition to the 3 "CPC-like" modes.
Impact on French market
Because a french computer, french games producers ported many of their games on those computers.
Thomson computers were know to have been used in some "common developpments" and ports for Amstrad CPC games.
As later MO6/TO8 models did include Video mode similar to Amstrad CPC's ones, in addition to a 16 colours character attributed mode (like on MSX1 or Spectrum...more like the MSX1 though...) and a 4096 colour palette.
Also those later models included more RAM than Amstrad's 8 bit computers.
But those computers were lacking a decent sound chip as it was shipped with only a beeper. Thomson said more decent sound system would be included into cartridge, but they would never be available.
Even the AY seems like a Sid in comparison.
And the almost only market was France (perhaps a few sold in Italia), where Amstrad litteraly raped Thomson's market shares in their homeland.
The fact was that the Amstrad CPC was more well rounded machine, far cheaper and had a fully compatible range while MO6 wasn't even compatible with TO8 (nor MO5 with TO7).
Also the CPC getting CP/M compatibility was a definitive edge.
Thomsons also got their share of Speccy Ports.
Exemples of games co-developped on Thomson and CPC
- Bivouac (TO8)
- Iznogoud (TO8)
- Sapiens (MO5/TO7) : originally an MO5 game.
- Le 5ème Axe (french name) from Loriciels, was originally a MO5 game.
- Captain Blood : the TO8 version is exactly the same as the CPC version, minus the sounds.
Comparison
Bivouac
- TO8 version :
- CPC version :
Bactron
While some ports used different palette (the TO8 often using the AtariST/16bit version palette when available) other games were simply straight ports with no alteration in palette from CPC to TO8.
Mostly when the CPC palette was largely adequat.
- TO8 version :
- CPC version :
Iznogoud
- TO8 version :
- CPC version :
In the case of this game (Iznogoud) the TO8 version includes extra features that are available on Atari ST version (and perhaps IBM PC too) but not on the Amstrad CPC due to the CPC464 version's limitation.
TO8 had an impressive 256K Ram that Amstrad users could only dream for to be available from the shelf and used by software companies...
The few games who got a TO8 version alongside the CPC version could easily get a PLUS upgrade just by using the same colours as the TO8 version is this one had a specific palette.
DemoScene
Don't laught, there is an actual Demoscene on Thomson computers.
- www.pulsdemos.com (in French)
- Thomson demoscene page (French and English)
Links
- Logicielsmoto.com a complete French site with softwares and stuff on Thomson computers.