7th April 2007

Computer bootlegs

posted in Business, Society, Technology by Rico Ferrari |

Brazil had from the 70’s to the 90’s a law that forbade microcomputer and related technology imports. The intention of the law: to protect Brazilian industry from competition to the level national industry could survive by itself. What happened? Despite minor Rio Grande do Sul and Sao Paulo industries born on their local Universities, most of the industry limited itself to bootleg designs from the major computer and peripheral makers. On the pics bellow, some of them.

Tk95, the Brazilian bootleg design of ZX-Spectrum

TK95 arrived. And it’s not just for fun.

CP-200, another Brazilian bootleg design for the Sinclair ZX-81

CP 200 was another famous Brazilian bootleg design for British Sinclair’s ZX-81. The company, Prologica, bootleged several other designs from other major foreigner companies.

CP-400, a Brazilian bootleg design for the Color TRS-80

CP 400 was the most expensive of the small 8 bits computers by the time (from 1982 to circa 1986). It was a bootleg design of RadioShack TRS-80 Color, also from Prologica.

There are currently 2 responses to “Computer bootlegs”

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  1. 1 On April 10th, 2007, Atari 2600 bootleg » Bizarre Brazil said:

    [...] I’ve posted before, Brazilian tech industry between the 70’s and the 90’s bootlegged every succesful design from the major foreign industries. Atari 2600 was a kind of an exception. Although some designs [...]

  2. 2 On May 6th, 2007, CP 500 » Bizarre Brazil said:

    [...] to this old and beautiful CP-500. This was a TRS-80 clone which ran a CPM-80 like OS, also from Prologica as you can see the small [...]

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