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ENCORE-HOSTSTATION-110 [16-Jan-86]

 The Encore  HostStation 110  is  a terminal  with  a large  monitor  in
 landscape orientation;  the screen  resolution is  1056H x  800V.   The
 keyboard is  identical  to  the  DEC VT220  layout,  and  the  internal
 processor is  a National  Semiconductor 32016.   Quantity-one price  is
 $3995.

 Encore  originally  offered  a  similar  100  model  without  windowing
 features, and a workstation running Unix from a 40Mb disk, both in  the
 same box as the 110, which fits comfortably on a desktop.  Regrettably,
 both these products have been dropped.

 The terminal  has  one 9-pin  and  two 25-pin  serial  ports,  allowing
 support of two  host computers and  a mouse, or  three host  computers.
 The ports support data rates of 110 to 38400 baud.

 The screen  can  be split  into  four windows,  each  of which  can  be
 connected to any of  the serial ports.  A  single dedicated key in  the
 upper function key row switches from one window to the next.

 The HS110  supports  ANSI,  DEC  VT220,  VT100,  Regis,  and  Tektronix
 emulation, and all parameters are selected by a convenient menu display
 on the bottom of the screen.  Screen contents are preserved when  setup
 mode is  selected and  deselected,  except when  the font  is  changed.
 There are six resident character sets:

        Large    88H x 50V
        EM100W  105H x 42V
        EM100N  176H x 42V
        Small   264H x 142V
        Ledger  176H x 106V
        Std     132H x 71V

 In three months  of daily use  of this terminal,  I have almost  always
 used  the  Large   character  set,  which   gives  double  the   normal
 alphanumeric terminal screen  contents.  The characters  are large  and
 very readable, especially displayed black on a white background.

 Downloaded fonts are  supported, but  only in a  small Regis  character
 box.  This makes it impossible to use this terminal for TeX typesetting
 previewing, which  is  my greatest  disappointment  with it.   It  does
 support bitmap downloading, but  the data volume is  too great to  make
 this a viable approach.

 I have  used  the  terminal extensively  in  Tektronix  graphics  mode.
 Unlike the DEC terminals and most VT100 and VT220 emulators, the  HS110
 has no trouble  keeping up a  9600 baud without  flow control  enabled.
 The only apparent software bug that  I have observed is that  Tektronix
 mode can  only be  entered from  setup  mode, or  by a  special  escape
 sequence from  the host,  but not  by <ESC><FF>,  the Tektronix  screen
 clear sequence which most  other vendors use  to enter Tektronix  mode.
 Once entered, it  can be  reset to  alphanumeric mode  only from  setup
 mode.  A host escape sequence to switch back to HS110 mode is ignored.

 In vector drawing  speed comparisons with  the Intecolor VHR-19  (which
 uses the NEC graphics display  controller chips), the HS110 runs  about
 10% faster, which  is remarkable  in that  it is  using a  conventional
 microprocessor for all its  work.  It does  not appear that  horizontal
 and vertical lines are drawn more rapidly than diagonal lines; if  that
 is indeed  the  case, then  perhaps  there  is room  for  further  code
 optimization, since special case coding for horizontal lines should  be
 able to achieve a  speed-up of 32, and  vertical lines should be  drawn
 somewhat faster than diagonal lines.

 Tektronix mode is available in a full screen display, as well as in two
 half-size side-by-side  displays.  That  may  be useful  for  comparing
 plots.

 In summary, this is indeed a fine terminal, and I have no hesitation in
 recommending it.  It is  outstanding for graphics  use, for users  with
 impaired  vision,  and  for  people  who  need  to  have  one  terminal
 communicating simultaneously  with two  or three  hosts.  My  strongest
 wish for it  is for downloaded  font support, because  it could make  a
 very fine TeX typeset output preview station.