The VT100 was the first of Digital's terminals to be based on an industry-standard microprocessor, the
Intel 8080. Options could be added to the terminal to support an external printer, additional graphic renditions, and more character memory. The last option, known as the "Advanced Video Option" or AVO, allowed the terminal to support a full 24 lines of text in 132-column mode, increasing from the 14 lines of the unexpanded model when used in 132-column mode. The VT100 became a platform on which Digital constructed several related hardware products. The VT101 and VT102 were cost-reduced, non-expandable follow-on versions. The VT101 was essentially a base-model VT100, while the VT102 came standard with the AVO and serial printer port options pre-installed. The VT105 contained a simple graphics subsystem known as
waveform graphics which was mostly compatible with same system in the earlier
VT55. This system allowed two mathematical functions to be drawn to the screen superimposed over the normal text display, allowing text and graphics to be mixed to produce charts and similar output. The VT125 added an implementation of the byte-efficient Remote Graphic Instruction Set (
ReGIS), which used custom ANSI codes to send graphics commands to the terminal, rather than requiring the terminal to be set to a separate less-efficient
graphics mode like the VT105. The VT131 added
block mode support, allowing a form to be sent to the terminal and filled in locally by the user, and then sending the contents of the fields in the form back to the host when the form is filled in. The VT100 form factor left significant physical space in the case for expansion, and DEC used this to produce several all-in-one stand-alone
minicomputer systems. The VT103 included a cardcage and 4×4 (8-slot)
Q-Bus backplane, sufficient to configure a small 16-bit
LSI-11 microcomputer system within the case, and supported an optional dual
TU58 DECtape II block-addressable cartridge tape drive which could be used like a very slow disk drive. The
VT180 (codenamed "Robin") added a single-board microcomputer using a
Zilog Z80 to run the
CP/M operating system. The
VT278 (DECmate) added a small
PDP-8 processor, allowing the terminal to run Digital's
WPS-8 word processing software. ==See also==