Sharp
MZ-80K (1979)
By the beginning of 1979, even the least astute observers of the
electronics scene were becoming aware of one important fact: the home
computer was here to stay. It was, essentially, an idea whose time had
come.

At this stage, the three big players were Apple, Commodore and Radio
Shack with the Apple, Pet and TRS-80 respectively. MITS, the company
that had started it all with the Altair, had been absorbed by Pertec
and effectively disappeared. There were several other companies in the
field but most of them, such as Imsai and North Star, were
concentrating their efforts on the low end of the business sector.
Several other companies were in the process of launching new machines
aimed at the home market. The common thread here, of course, was that
all these machines were made in America.
There were home computers being produced in other countries but they
tended to be quirky machines with limited general appeal to the general
public and none of them were likely to capture an international market.
It came as rather a shock to everyone, then, when the Japanese Sharp
Corporation suddenly released a sophisticated home computer that was
better built than anything else on the market and came with a well
planned set of supporting peripherals.
It shouldn't really have come as a surprise that the Japanese would
want a part of what was clearly going to be a lucrative market. Sharp
themselves had tested the water with a 'training kit' called the MZ40K
a couple of years earlier which was little more than a processor board
with a hexadecimal keyboard and a 4 element LED display. It hadn't been
a runaway success but it clearly encouraged the company.
It's successor, the MZ-80K was an altogether different beast. Clearly
borrowing heavily from the design of the first Commodore Pet, the Sharp
machine was a clean machine in every sense.

The
solid metal chassis was
obviously meant to withstand domestic misuse while the 40 column
display was
about fifteen per cent larger than that on the Pet, and substantially
better than the one supplied with the TRS-80.
The built-in cassette recorder was another major selling point at a
time when very few hobbyists even knew that such things as floppy disks
existed. Although it was, oddly, not controlled from the keyboard, it
still provided a reliable method of saving and restoring both
programmes and data.
Sharp had borrowed another, less appealing, feature from the original
Pet: the square keyboard.
Given that few users would know how to touch type, this was less of a
drawback than some commentators made it sound at the type but designers
at Sharp were clearly stung by the criticism and the MZ-80Ks successors
(oddly named the MZ-80A and MZ-80B) were both equipped with typewriter
style keyboards.
The most interesting feature of the Sharp machine was that,
unlike any of its
main competitiors, the MZ-80K did
not
have BASIC in ROM. This appeared as a brave, if not foolhardy, move to
most observers
but it was actually a very clever ploy. It meant that not only could
Sharp offer a range of languages from the beginning, but it would also
encourage third parties to write languages and other software for the
MZ-80K. The drawback was that, unlike a Pet or an Apple, you couldn't
just turn on the computer and use it. Instead, you had to wait thirty
or forty seconds while you ran in a language or other programme. So not
that much has changed, then....
Interestingly, one of the first companies to see the potential in the
Sharp machine was a small U.K. company based in the sea-side resort
town of Torquay. Crystal Electronics released their Xtal BASIC very
soon after the Sharp appeared, having written it originally for the
British Nascom computer which, like the MZ-80K, was a Z-80 based
machine which came with just a small machine code monitor in ROM.
The MZ-80K offered reasonable opportunities for expansion. The basic
machine came with 16KB of memory, easily expanded to the maximum of
48KB.

There was an expansion card box that linked
to the basic machine via a bus connector and a pair of 5.25 inch floppy
disk drives that could connect to the expansion box. There was also a
re-packaged Epson printer designed to fit well with the computer's
appearance. All in all, this was pretty well the best presented home
computer that had been seen up to then.
The Sharp was a success in Japan and Europe although it didn't do so
well in the U.S. where the home grown opposition was just too well
entrenched.
I aquired my own MZ-80K when a customer at the shop I was managing
asked if he could part-exchange it against a Pet. Officially, we had no
policy to allow this but privately I made him what I considered a
reasonable offer and he all but bit my arm off.
Frankly, I don't know what could have put him off the Sharp. I found it
to be a marvellous little machine and spent many happy hours writing
word processing and spreadsheet programmes for it, not to mention a
little database utility of which I was especially proud.
For a brief moment, it looked like the Japanese electronic companies
would come to dominate the home computing market as they already
dominated the consumer electronics business but, in the event, this was
not to be. The entrance of the giant IBM corporation into the business
upset many applecarts and the Japanese were only one among many victims
of the inexorable rise of the PC.