I just received an old Brother WP-3410 word processor. Interesting little machine. Basically a computerized typewriter, with a floppy disk drive and a CRT monitor. I remember seeing these when I was growing up, but they seem to have faded into obscurity. Consumer word processors started to appear in the mid-80s, and were popular thru the late-90. The range of features varied. The most stripped down ones were just electronic typewriters. Basic word processors had a small LCD screen, could preform spell and grammar checking on a line or paragraph of text, than type it out on paper. More advanced models had floppy disk storage, large (usually external) monitors, and could format an entire document before printing it out using it's internal printer. They could also preform other tasks, such as spreadsheets, mail merge, and even some games, either from ROM or as add-ons from a floppy disk.
The earliest Brother WP-series word processors somewhat resembled a
Compaq Portable PC having a small screen and floppy drives in the front face, the printing mechanism behind them in the top of the main unit, and an external keyboard that doubled as a cover for the display and floppy drive. Later models integrated integrated the keyboard into the main unit, and used an external monochrome monitor. The floppy disks were an unusual format that could only be read or written using a Brother WP. At the time they came out, unique disk formats were't much of a problem, as other electronic word processors had their own disk formats, along with varying disk formats for the IBM PC, Apple II, Macintosh, Amiga, Atari ST, among others. Later models would use standard PC double density and high density floppy formats, saving documents in it's own file type, plane text (with no formatting), or sometimes the ability to export to other common file types, such as WordPerfect. They would also transition to color monitors, more in-ROM apps, and replace the daisy wheel text printing mechanism with a quiet inkjet mechanism that was capable to WYSIWYG document creation. Some of the latest models used MS-DOS and
GeoWorks in ROM, included a modem and (using it's locked in ISP, Earthlink) do simple web browsing and email.
As I said earlier, the one I got was a WP-3410. It uses their older (or later, economy model) architecture. The main unit looks like an electronic typewriter, with a keyboard, and daisy wheel printing mechanism. Below the keyboard on the front edge is a 3.5" single sided floppy disk drive that reads and writes double density disks in their unique 240 KB format. There is a clear plastic cover over the printing mechanism. In the back is a compartment to store the power cord, which flips up to be a paper support. There is a key on the keyboard that toggles between TW (typewriter) and WP (word processor) mode. In TW mode, the keyboard outputs directly to paper. In WP mode, it outputs to the screen, allowing editing, formatting, saving, and only printing when the PRINT key is pressed. In theory, it could be used in TW mode without the monitor, except that there are no indicator lights to show if it's in TW mode, if the caps lock is on, or if the unit is even turned on. A removable plastic cover covers the keyboard and part of the sound shield when not in use.
The monitor is a 12" amber (P3) monochrome monitor on a swivel stand. It plugs into the main unit using the same DE9 connector as a monochrome PC monitor. Supposedly the unit supports dual monitors, but I'm not sure how it's supposed to connect, as there is only one monitor port. The signals for the 2nd monitor maybe on the unused pins of the monitor port, requiring a Y cable to break these out for a second monitor. The included monitor does have a power indicator light.
It appears to be in good condition, though well used. There is a switch on the printer sound cover that senses if the cover is open or closed. If the cover is open, the machine is rendered inoperable by a dialog box stating that the cover is open. The cover switch appears to be faulty, and would not close when the cover was in the down position. After trying to align it, I removed the plug base from the system board and replaced it with a jumper shunt. Aside from noise, I see know other reason for this switch to be there. The unit came with one unlabeled disk, which is either blank or corrupted. It came with a carbon print ribbon, but no daisy wheel or correction tape. Luckily, I was able to find a starter kit, which included all of these consumable items. There is a carrying handle that flips under the front that is also missing. There was no manual. I was not able to find a manual for it, but a manual for the WP-2200 seems to cover all it's functions and capabilities, despite the 2200 being the older "luggable" style.
One thing I was curious about was how it worked, so I opened it up. The mainboard consists of a Hitachi HD64180 CPU, which is a derivative of Zilog Z80. There is also 64KB of SRAM, a CRT control chip, a couple of ROM chips, and some various other chips. Essentially a setup typical of 8-bit computers of the 80s. Judging by it's hardware and the software architecture of later models, I'm curious if it's built-in software is really a word processor running on top of an embedded version of CP/M.
Anyone else, have, use, or have any interest in electronic word processors?