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We received a very attractive offer for some Digital Engineering HiScan terminals. The company has gone out of business, and a local dealer purchased several dozen of these. I tested both color and monochrome (grey-scale) models, and performance comparisons are given below with the recently-reviewed Plessey and Encore terminals. The HiScan terminals are modified DEC VT240 (monochrome) and VT241 (color) terminals. Although the monitors are still labelled ``Digital'', they have been internally modified, and therefore cannot be serviced by DEC. The controller box is separate, like on the DEC products, but is somewhat smaller. The keyboard is a standard DEC VT240 keyboard, and the setup options are very similar, though extended to support new features. HiScan 4210: * monochrome * alphanumeric resolution: 80/132H x 30V (cf. DEC 24V) * graphics resolution: 800H x 600V (cf. DEC 240V) * 4 gray levels * proprietary bit-slice graphics processor * non-interlaced 60Hz 12in modified DEC VR201 monitor * emulates: VT100, VT52, VT240, VT640, Regis, and Tektronix 4010 HiScan 4205: * color * alphanumeric resolution: 80/132H x 30V (cf. DEC 24V) * graphics resolution: 800H x 300V (cf. DEC 240V) * 4 colors displayable from palette of 64 * proprietary bit-slice graphics processor * non-interlaced 60Hz 14in modified DEC VR241 monitor * emulates: VT100, VT52, VT240, VT640, Regis, and Tektronix 4010, and optionally either color 4107 or 4105 The DEC VT240 monochrome terminal has a current list price of $1980, and the color VT241 lists at $2980. These HiScans are available to us for about $1000 in either monochrome or color, which is an extremely attractive price for a graphics terminal, particularly considering the extra graphical and alphanumeric resolution. The review of the DEC VT24x terminals elsewhere in this file was very negative, pointing out several problems. The most serious was the inability of the terminals to function above 2400 baud without data loss. I am happy to report that the HiScan terminals worked without any data loss at 9600 baud in both graphics and alphanumerics tests with no flow control in effect; this makes them quite usable for EMACS. The DEC terminals are also rather slow in graphics mode. Function keys on the HiScan terminals can be loaded locally as well as from the host, and can be saved in non-volatile memory; on the VT24x terminals, they can only be host-loaded, and are volatile. Here are some speed comparisons with the Plessey and Encore terminals. This table appears without the HiScan entries in the Plessey review. ``Vector drawing performance of any graphics terminal is very important, so several tests were made comparing the PT-100G with the Encore HostStation 110, which so far has been the fastest graphics terminal I have found. The first set drew 1025 horizontal, vertical, and diagonal lines on a square filling the shortest extent of the screen; this tests performance of the vector drawing for long vectors. If special case code has been developed for the case of dots falling into consecutive memory locations, one would expect that at least one of these should run 16 to 32 times faster. Neither the PT-100G nor the HS-110 have this optimization. The second set of tests are Sierpinski curves from DEM81 in Cartesian, plane polar, and elliptical coordinates; these emphasis short vector performance, with about equal numbers of horizontal, vertical, and diagonal vectors.'' ------------------------------------------------------------------- Test PT-100G HS-110 HiScan mono HiScan color (sec) (sec) (sec) (sec) ------------------------------------------------------------------- horizontal 17 12 14 12 vectors vertical 15 12 14 12 vectors diagonal 31 14 15 14 vectors Sierpinski 63 60 61 71 Cartesian Sierpinski 101 101 105 103 plane polar Sierpinski 102 102 103 108 elliptical ------------------------------------------------------------------- The HiScan is therefore comparable in performance with the Plessey and Encore terminals, although the pixel drawing rate is necessarily lower because of the reduced screen resolution (56% of the HS-110 in monochrome, 28% of the HS-110 in color). Considering the relative prices of these terminals, the Digital Engineering terminals can be rated a good buy in color; in monochrome, the Plessey is close enough in price that it is a better buy.