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The Plessey PT-100G is a high-resolution (1024 x 768) low-cost ($1395) VT52/VT100/VT102/Tektronix-4014 compatible terminal. Its lower cost, higher resolution, and better features and performance make it the best choice today for low-budget graphics, replacing the Visual 500. VT100-compatible terminals often have difficulty keeping up in alphanumeric mode without XON/XOFF flow control enabled. The PT-100G has a 256-character input buffer, and was usable for EMACS editing with flow control disabled, although the screen occasionally lost a line or two. When flow control is enabled, it becomes unusable with EMACS, because the XOFF (CTL-S) character sent initiates a string search. Severe data loss occurs with graphical output unless flow control is selected. Unfortunately, this is only alterable in setup mode; it cannot be changed by a command sequence from the host. The screen displays either 24 or 48 lines, with 80 or 132 columns. In 48V x 132H mode, the characters are small, but still readable. The monitor has a 14-inch diagonal (standard terminal size) and uses a P39 phosphor; this has a long persistence, causing objectionable ghosting of scrolling text. This problem can be minimized by switching the display to inverse video, which is possible with the Visual 500, but not with the PT-100G. This terminal has 4 additional keys for control of zoom and pan. Unlike most others with these features, which implement them in the hardware video generator, the PT-100G stores the vectors locally, then redraws the display when the zoom is selected or deselected. When the Zoom Out key is touched, a rectangle covering the zoomed area appears on the screen. Its size can be adjusted up or down with two dedicated keys marked by large and small rectangles; it can be moved in any of 8 directions with the arrow keys on the numeric keypad. Pressing the shift key increases the speed of both these operations. When the Zoom In key is touched, the display is cleared and the selected area is redrawn in the entire screen area. Pressing the Zoom Out key clears the display and redraws the original picture. This software zoom is considerably slower than hardware zoom, but has the advantage that the scaling is continuous and preserves single-pixel lines, instead of being restricted to pixel replication factors of 1 .. 8 or 16. The standard model has space for about 6500 vector vertices; any number of vectors can be drawn, but if the zoom feature is activated, the last part of the display will be lost when it is redrawn. Memory extensions are available to increase the space to about 98000 vertices, and I would strongly recommend their purchase. The terminal setup allows setting of both the X and Y scale factors and screen origin for converting Tektronix 4010 (0 .. 1023) and 4014 (0 .. 4095) coordinates to screen coordinates. 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 (sec) (sec) ------------------------------------- horizontal 17 12 vectors vertical 15 12 vectors diagonal 31 14 vectors Sierpinski 63 60 Cartesian Sierpinski 101 101 plane polar Sierpinski 102 102 elliptical ------------------------------------- The short vector performance of the PT-100G is almost identical to the HS-110, while the long vector performance indicates room for improvement, particularly for diagonal lines. For typical plots, the two can be considered comparable in speed, which speaks well for the PT-100G. When the zoom feature was used for the third test, the 31 sec was reduced to 24 sec when the plot was redrawn from the internal display list.