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    Amstrad is a manufacturer of electronics based in Brentwood in Essex, England and founded in 1968 by Sir Alan Michael Sugar in the UK. The name is a contraction of Alan Michael Sugar Trading. It was listed on the London Stock Exchange in 1980, and is still listed today. During the late 1980s, Amstrad had approx. 25% market share in the computing industry in Europe. As of 2006, Amstrad's main business is manufacturing Sky TV interactive boxes.

        Amstrad
                1960s and 1970s
                1980s
                1990s - Present
            Product Line
            See also
    Company NameAmstrad plc
    Company LogoImage:Amstrad.gif
    Company TypePublic limited company
    Plc]] ([http://www.london...GB0000953850GBGBXSEAQ0095385AMT LSE:AMT)
    FoundationUnited Kingdom
    LocationBrentwood, Essex
    Key PeopleAlan Sugar, Founder & Chairman
    Simon Sug...
    IndustryElectronics
    Revenueprofit £102.51 million Pound sterling
    Operating Incomeprofit £26 million GBP (2005)
    Net Incomeprofit £17.90 million GBP (2005)
    Num Employees85 (2005)

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    1960s and 1970s
    Amstrad was founded in 1968 by its current Chairman and CEO, Alan Sugar. Amstrad entered the market in the field of consumer electronics. During the 1970s they were at the forefront of low-priced hi-fi, TV and car stereo cassette technologies. Lower prices were achieved by injection moulding plastic hi-fi turntable covers, undercutting competitors who used the vacuum forming process. Amstrad expanded to the production of audio amplifiers and tuners.

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    1980s

    In 1980, Amstrad went public trading on the London Stock Exchange, and doubled in size each year during the early '80s. Amstrad began marketing their own home computers in an attempt to capture the market from Commodore and Sinclair, with the Amstrad CPC range in 1984. The CPC 464 was launched in the UK, France, Australia and Germany. It was followed by the CPC 664 CPC 6128 models. "Plus" variants later in the products lives increased their functionality slightly, while building in compatibility with the GX4000, Amstrad's short-lived foray into the video gaming world.

    In 1985, the business-oriented Amstrad PCW range was introduced, which were principally word processors running the CP/M operating system and the LocoScript word processing program. The "Amsoft" division of Amstrad was set up to provide in-house software and consumables. Amstrad briefly entered the video game console business with the GX4000 based on the CPC Plus hardware which failed to catch on.


    On 7 April 1986 Amstrad announced it had bought from Sinclair Research "...the worldwide rights to sell and manufacture all existing and future Sinclair computers and computer products, together with the Sinclair brand name and those intellectual property rights where they relate to computers and computer related products." * which included the ZX Spectrum, for £5 million. This included Sinclair unsold stock of QLs and Spectrums. Amstrad made more than £5 million on selling these surplus machines alone. Amstrad launched three new variants of the Spectrum: The +2, based on the Sinclair ZX Spectrum+ 128K, with a built-in tape drive (like the CPC 464); the +3, with a built-in floppy disk drive (similar to the CPC 664 and 6128), taking the 3" disks that many Amstrad machines used, and a completely new motherboard; and the +2A/+2B, using the +3 motherboard in a +2 case with tape drive.

    The company produced a range of affordable MS-DOS-based, and later Windows-based personal computers, the first of which was the PC-1512 at £399 in 1986. It was a success, capturing more than 25% of the European computer market. A year later, in 1987, the Amstrad PCW 8512 was released as a computer dedicated to word processing, it was priced at £499. In 1988 Amstrad attempted to make the first affordable portable personal computer with the PPC 512 / 640, introduced a year before the Macintosh Portable, at 8MHz it ran MS-DOS and GEM with a variant of the Color Graphics Adapter (CGA) video card that allowed GEM to display sixteen-colour graphics.

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    1990s - Present
    In the early-1990s Amstrad began to focus on portable computers rather than desktop computers. In 1990, Amstrad tried to enter the gaming market with the Amstrad GX4000, similar to what Commodore did at the same time with the C64 and the C64 GS. The console was a commercial failure, becoming less popular because it used 8-bit technology unlike the 16-bit Sega Mega Drive and Super Nintendo. In 1993 Amstrad released the PenPad, a PDA similar to the Apple Newton, and released only weeks before it. It was a commercial failure, and had several technical and usability problems. It lacked most features that the Apple Newton included, but had a lower price at $450.

    As Amstrad began to concentrate less on computers and more in communication, they purchased several telecommunications businesses including Betacom, Dancall Telecom, Viglen Computers and Dataflex Design Communications during the early 1990s. Amstrad has been a major supplier of set top boxes to UK satellite TV provider Sky since its launch in 1989. Amstrad was key to the introduction of Sky, as it was the only manufacturer producing receiver boxes and dishes at the system's launch, and has continued to manufacture set top boxes for Sky, from analogue to digital and now including Sky's Sky+ digital video recorder.

    In 1997, Amstrad supplied set top boxes to Australian broadcaster Foxtel, and in 2004 to Italian broadcaster Sky Italia. In 2000, Amstrad released the first of its combined telephony and e-mail devices, called the e-m@iler. This was followed by the e-m@ilerplus in 2002, and the E3 Videophone in 2004. Amstrad has also produced a variety of home entertainment products over their history, including hi-fis, televisions, VCRs, and DVD players. Following the success of the UK version of the TV series The Apprentice Amstrad has also started producing animatronic Alan Sugar heads.

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    Product Line
      Amstrad CPC464
      Amstrad CPC472 (same as CPC464 but with 72K instead of 64K)
      Amstrad CPC664 (3 inch Internal disk variant of CPC464)
      Amstrad CPC6128 (128K version of the CPC664 with 3 inch Disk)
      Amstrad PC1512 (Intel 8086, 8MHz, 512Kb RAM, CGA Graphics) - Marketed in the United States as the PC5120
      Amstrad PC1640 (Intel 8086, 8MHz, 640Kb RAM, MDA/Hercules/CGA/EGA Colour Graphics) - Marketed in the United States as the PC6400
      Amstrad PPC512 (Portable using NECV30 processor, 512Kb RAM, non-backlit Supertwist CGA, one or two 720Kb 3.5" floppy drives) - released around the same time as the PC1512.
      Amstrad PPC640 (Portable using NECV30 processor, 640Kb RAM, non-backlit Supertwist CGA, one or two 720Kb 3.5" floppy drives) - released around the same time as the PC1640.
      Amstrad PCW8512
      Amstrad PCW9512
      Amstrad PC2086 (Nec V30 CPU, 8MHz, 640Kb RAM, VGA Graphics) launched 1989
      Amstrad PC2286 (Intel 80286 CPU, 12.5MHz, 1Mb RAM, VGA Graphics) launched 1989
      Amstrad PC2386 (Intel 80386DX CPU, 20MHz, 4Mb RAM, VGA Graphics) launched 1989
    Due to a problem with the on-board Seagate hard drive controllers which shipped with the Amstrad PC2386, these had to be recalled and fitted with Western Digital controllers on one of the four available ISA explansion slots. Amstrad sued but following bad press over problems with data corruption and crashing Amstrad lost its lead in the European PC market despite the prompt recall of affected computers.

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    See also
      Amstrad NC
     
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