The selection of industry partners was entrusted to
Gilbert Trigano, co-founder of
Club Méditerranée, connected with French companies such as
Exelvision,
Léanord,
SMT Goupil,
Thomson,
Bull,
LogAbax, etc. This choice was political because its initiator,
Jean-Jacques Servan-Schreiber, had indicated his preference for
Macintosh, which would be specially modified for the plan. In return, Apple would install a manufacturing unit in France rather than in Ireland. The agreement negotiated at the highest level with Apple included a complete transfer of technology for an assembly plant with the highest global standards in terms of productivity. But instead Thomson, a
nationalized company in difficulty, was chosen. The choice was made without a call for
tenders. The Computing for All plan popularized the
Nanoréseau: a
RS422 based
computer network of modest size (up to 32
workstations, at 500
kbit/s) which included
nano-machines (
Thomson MO5,
Thomson TO7/70 or
Thomson MO5NR) and a
PC compatible server (most often a
Bull Micral 30, but
Goupil 3,
Léanord Sil'z 16,
LogAbax Persona 1600 and
CSEE 150 were also used). The PC was equipped with two 5¼ inch
floppy disk drives, one used for the
operating system (
MS-DOS 2.11), the other with data for the Thomsons. The server also gave access to a shared
printer. A later version (NR33) allowed the use of a
hard disk by installing the whole system; this allowed a much faster start. All the machines could be controlled remotely (the server in particular thanks to the
NR-DOS system) and it was possible to recover a copy of any portion of their memory remotely by an operation called "station looting" (command CLONE in
BASIC). ==Implementation==