Difference between revisions of "Video terminal"

From Computer History Wiki
Jump to: navigation, search
m (typo)
m (See also: +flashterm)
 
(One intermediate revision by the same user not shown)
Line 12: Line 12:
  
 
* [[:Category:Video Terminals|Video Terminals]]
 
* [[:Category:Video Terminals|Video Terminals]]
 +
* [[flashterm]] - ANSI video terminal emulator
  
 
==External links==
 
==External links==
  
* [https://vt100.net/dec/vt_history Meet the Family] - a brief history of [[Digital Equipment Corporation|DEC]] VDT's
+
* [https://vt100.net/ vt100.net]
 +
** [https://vt100.net/dec/vt_history Meet the Family] - a brief history of [[Digital Equipment Corporation|DEC]] VDT's
 
** [https://vt100.net/dec/animation/ DEC Video Terminal Animations]
 
** [https://vt100.net/dec/animation/ DEC Video Terminal Animations]
  
 
[[Category: Device Basics‎‎]]
 
[[Category: Device Basics‎‎]]

Latest revision as of 01:25, 21 February 2024

A video terminal (sometimes called video display terminal, or VDT for short) was a terminal on which the characters being output were 'painted' on a CRT via a purely electronic process. It was thus roughly the same functionality as the earlier printing terminals, such as Teletypes, but instead of the output being printed on paper by a mechanical system, it was displayed on the screen. Like the earlier printing terminals, they were used to allow a user to do input/output to a computer; they usually communicated with the computer via asynchronous serial line.

The original chief advantage was speed, since the all-electronic mechanism could run at much higher speeds; the disadvantage was that only a limited amount of information could be displayed at one time. (This was particularly true of early ones, which could only display very limited amounts of text - some as small as 12 lines of 40 characters).

Very early model provided only the same motion controls as their printing predecessors - line feed, carriage return, etc. However, the ability to move the cursor to specific screen locations was soon added, which made possible a predecessor of WYSIWYG, to wit, screen editors such as EMACS.

A few had the capability to do graphics, such as lines, points, etc.

Once semiconductor RAM prices fell low enough, they were replaced with bit-mapped display‏‎s, although the latter were directly connected to the computer's main bus, usually on a personal computer.

See also

External links