ITT 2020
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia


The ITT 2020 was an Apple II computer clone manufactured by ITT under license from Apple Computer (the first licensed clone), specifically for the European market. In the Benelux, it was distributed by International Bell Telephone Company. It was distributed in the United Kingdom by Microsense Computer Limited.
The major difference, and the reason ITT believed this personal computer would be a success, was that the color video signal conformed to the European PAL standard, rather than the American NTSC standard. This meant color graphics could be viewed using a standard European monitor or TV set, rather than having to import an NTSC monitor from America or Japan as was the case for the Apple II. ITT sold this computer for a few years, starting in 1979. When Apple Computer started shipping the Apple II Europlus, ITT withdrew from the market, although the Europlus did not support color.
ITT also supplied a 113.75 kB single-sided floppy disk drive that was identical to the Apple II disk drive, supporting 13 sectors under DOS 3.2 on a 5+1⁄4-inch (133 mm) floppy disk. They never supplied the upgraded 140 kB single-sided, double-density drive supporting 16 sectors under DOS 3.3.
Source:[1]
- A 220 V 50 Hz Power Supply manufactured by ITT themselves
- The case was spray-painted a matte silver color, and the keyboard was black.
- The ITT 2020 used a higher clock frequency, necessary for the PAL signal. A 17.73 MHz crystal was used (Four times the PAL subcarrier frequency of 4.433 MHz), whereas the Apple II used a 14.318 MHz crystal- four times the NTSC subcarrier frequency of 3.58 MHz. In the ITT 2020, the crystal frequency was divided by 17 to give the microprocessor a clock frequency of 1.042 MHz. In the Apple II, the frequency was divided by 14 to give a microprocessor clock frequency of 1.023 MHz.[2]
- The slots in the back of the casing were smaller, making it extremely difficult to install some expansion cards.
- On later versions of the ITT2020, the reset switch only worked in combination with the Control key. This was done to avoid the many accidental resets earlier (and Apple II) users complained about.
- The 4th annunciator output was not supported. The I/O addresses (0xC05E and 0xC05F) Apple used for this output were used by ITT to bank-switch the extra RAM chip.
- The third button on the game connector was not supported, as ITT used the I/O address of this input (0xC063) to read the extra RAM.
- The bug in the
ONERR GOTOroutine in the Apple II that required users to BLOAD a patch, was resolved in the ITT 2020. - Some users reported a bug in the
XDRAWroutine, causing strange shapes to appear under certain circumstances. - The DOS ITT supplied with the 2020 was Apple DOS 3.2. However, a
CATALOGlisting showed Basic programs as type 'P' (for PALSoft) rather than type 'A' (for Applesoft)
