American Computer and Peripheral

http://dbpedia.org/resource/American_Computer_and_Peripheral an entity of type: Thing

American Computer & Peripheral, Inc. (AC&P), also written as American Computer and Peripheral, was an American computer company based in Santa Ana, California. The company was founded in 1985 by Alan Lue and released several expansion boards for the IBM PC as well as a few PC clones before going bankrupt in December 1989. Obscure in its own time, the company's 386 Translator was the first plug-in board for Intel's newly released 80386 processor and the first mass-market computing device to offer consumers a means of using the 386 in July 1986. rdf:langString
rdf:langString American Computer and Peripheral
rdf:langString American Computer & Peripheral, Inc.
rdf:langString American Computer & Peripheral, Inc.
xsd:integer 69015988
xsd:integer 1115343894
rdf:langString Rosenbaum
rdf:langString American Computer and Peripheral
rdf:langString Amirrezvani
rdf:langString Pugila
rdf:langString Trivette
xsd:integer 2 20 92
xsd:integer 1986 1987
rdf:langString Ranney
rdf:langString Shackelford
rdf:langString Staff writer
rdf:langString American Computer and Peripheral
rdf:langString Chabal
rdf:langString OpenCorporates
xsd:integer 2 8 125
xsd:integer 1986
rdf:langString n.d.
xsd:integer 30
rdf:langString vertical
rdf:langString Various AC&P PC clones; from top to bottom: the American 88, the American 286, and the American 286-A
rdf:langString in Santa Ana, California, United States
rdf:langString Alan Lue
rdf:langString American 286-A.jpg
rdf:langString American 286.jpg
rdf:langString American 88.jpg
rdf:langString Former headquarters in Santa Ana, California
rdf:langString Computer
rdf:langString File:American Computer and Peripheral logo.png
rdf:langString 12C
xsd:integer 386
rdf:langString
rdf:langString American 286
rdf:langString American XTSR
xsd:integer 220
rdf:langString American Computer & Peripheral, Inc. (AC&P), also written as American Computer and Peripheral, was an American computer company based in Santa Ana, California. The company was founded in 1985 by Alan Lue and released several expansion boards for the IBM PC as well as a few PC clones before going bankrupt in December 1989. Obscure in its own time, the company's 386 Translator was the first plug-in board for Intel's newly released 80386 processor and the first mass-market computing device to offer consumers a means of using the 386 in July 1986.
rdf:langString yes
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 21370

data from the linked data cloud