GMC-4

Japanese microcomputer
GMC-4

The GMC-4 is the only 4-bit microcomputer to be mass-produced in the last 30 years (as of 2009).[1] It was produced by Gakken, a Japanese publisher who distributed it with a magazine attached to a box containing the components required to assemble the computer. It is based on the Texas Instruments TMS1100 microcontroller.

The GMC-4 is a modernized version of Gakken's 1983 Gakken FX-System, also known as the R-165. This system was also sold by Radio Shack as the Science Fair Microcomputer Trainer, but replaced the FX's circuit board with hand-wired circuity assembled by the user using springs to hold short bits of wire.[2]

The purpose of the GMC-4 is education.[citation needed] It provides an accessible way to learn about assembly language and the principles of computing.

References

  1. ^ "MATRIXSYNTH: The Gakken GMC-4".
  2. ^ Science Fair Microcomputer Trainer (PDF). Radio Shack.
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Gakken GMC-4 4bit micro computer.
  • Description of the kit, assembly language and example programs
  • Programming the Gakken GMC-4 Microcomputer, archived from the original on 2011-11-20
  • Example programs
  • gmc4cc (C Compiler for GMC-4)
  • G4CBASIC