Click Here to visit our Sponsor
The History of Computing The Magazine Have Fun there ! Buy goodies to support us
  Mistake ? You have mr info ? Click here !Add Info     Search     Click here use the advanced search engine
Browse console museumBrowse pong museum









 

Ready prompt T-shirts!

see details
ZX Spectrum T-shirts!

see details
ZX81 T-shirts!

see details
Arcade cherry T-shirts!

see details
Spiral program T-shirts!

see details
Atari joystick T-shirts!

see details
Battle Zone T-shirts!

see details
Vectrex ship T-shirts!

see details
Moon Lander T-shirts!

see details
Elite spaceship t-shirt T-shirts!

see details
Atari ST bombs T-shirts!

see details
C64 maze generator T-shirts!

see details
Competition Pro Joystick T-shirts!

see details
Pak Pak Monster T-shirts!

see details
BASIC code T-shirts!

see details
Vector ship T-shirts!

see details
Breakout T-shirts!

see details
Pixel adventure T-shirts!

see details





N > NBI > Hantu   


NBI
Hantu

All the information we have come from a copy of a 1975 brochure of an NBI Hantu (later renamed to the System II).

It boasted an Intel 8008 processor up to 16K of RAM and two 8" 250K floppies.

NBI was the first software based wordprocessing system on the market. At that time, the competition had to change firmware each time the program was changed.

NBI officially stood for "Nothing But Intials", however the real origin of the name NBI was "Necton Bilinium Incorporated" a name chosen by one of the company founders - Binx Selsby.

Thanks to Kenny Stamm for all this information.

_______________________

Larry Schear memories:
While working at Western Electric's Engineering Research Center in suburban Princeton, NJ, I had ordered a printer interface from NBI and Binx. We received an apparently handwrought circuit board, notable for two features.
First was the layout of the individual components on the circuit board. Nothing was rectilinear or orthogonal, but parts were placed apparently haphazardly (possibly to minimize inter-electrode coupling (as in a 6AK5)?), or just for satisfying 'style'.
The other was a strain relief 'system' for the ribbon cable - a massive, twisted tapered blacksmith-fabricated wrought-iron piece was affixed to the circuit board with a hand-hammered copper rivet! Most striking!
We all surmised that NBI was run out of a commune's tent! It DID work as advertised! Haven't seen it since the late 'seventies.



Please consider donating your old computer / videogame system to Old-Computers.com or one of our partners from anywhere in the world (Europe, America, Asia, etc.).


 

 

NAME  Hantu
MANUFACTURER  NBI
TYPE  Professional Computer
ORIGIN  U.S.A.
YEAR  1975
KEYBOARD  Full-stroke professional keyboard with two keypads (numeric and editing ?)
CPU  Intel 8008
RAM  up to 16k
SIZE / WEIGHT  Indecent...
BUILT IN MEDIA  2 x 8'' floppies, (250k each)
POWER SUPPLY  PSU built-in




Please buy a t-shirt to support us !
Ready prompt
ZX Spectrum
ZX81
Arcade cherry
Spiral program
Atari joystick
Battle Zone
Vectrex ship
C64 maze generator
Moon Lander
Competition Pro Joystick
Atari ST bombs
Elite spaceship t-shirt
Commodore 64 prompt
Pak Pak Monster
Pixel Deer
BASIC code
Shooting gallery
3D Cubes
Pixel adventure
Breakout
Vector ship

Related Ebay auctions in real time - click to buy yours



see more NBI Hantu Ebay auctions !



 
Click here to go to the top of the page   
Contact us | members | about old-computers.com | donate old-systems | FAQ
OLD-COMPUTERS.COM is hosted by - NYI (New York Internet) -