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Soviet home and educational computer
UKNC (Russian: УКНЦ) is a Soviet PDP-11-compatible educational micro computer, aimed at teaching school informatics courses. It is also known as Elektronika
UKNC
Soviet home computer series (1985–1993)
design team in the Soviet Union. It is the predecessor of the more powerful UKNC and DVK micros. Developed in 1983, and first released in 1985, they are based
Electronika_BK
Arrangement of keys on a typographic keyboard
JCUKEN keyboard of the UKNC computer
Keyboard_layout
Russian electronic company
Elektronika computers used a Soviet CPU, compatible with PDP-11: Elektronika 60 UKNC DVK – clone of SM EVM, stripped for mass production to satisfy general scientific
Elektronika
Soviet family of personal computers
DVK-3 CPU DVK-3 DVK-3M2 Kvant 4C (aka DVK-4) Elektronika BK-0010 SM EVM UKNC Articles about the USSR Computers history Images of the DVK computers Archive
DVK
1980 Soviet microprocessor family
Soviet general-purpose mini- and microcomputer designs like the SM EVM, DVK, UKNC, and BK families. Due to being the CPU of the popular Elektronika BK home
1801_series_CPU
clones Elektronika BK-0010 (БК-0010, БК-0011) — LSI-11 clone home computer UKNC (УКНЦ) — educational, PDP11-like Elektronika 60, Elektronika 100 Elektronika
List of Soviet computer systems
List_of_Soviet_computer_systems
British academic
international development as a non-executive director of the UK National Commission (UKNC) for UNESCO, with special responsibility for the social and human sciences
Colin_J._McInnes
Series of 16-bit minicomputers
Electronika 100-25, Electronika BK series, Electronika 60, Electronika 85, DVK, UKNC, and some models of the SM EVM series (in the Soviet Union). SM-4, SM-1420
PDP-11
Series of personal home computers
Compounding matters was the rivalry with another computer of similar purpose, the UKNC. As a result, the delivery of the new computer significantly lagged behind
Corvette_(computer)
Dialect of the BASIC programming language
programming language running on the Elektronika BK-0010-01/BK-0011M and UKNC computers. It was developed at Vilnius University, located in Lithuania which
Vilnius_BASIC
clones such as ES PEVM or Iskra-1030 (however, other Soviet computers such as UKNC generally used KOI-7 or KOI-8). The cells B0–EF seem to be the origin for
Main_code_page_(Russian)
for DOS batch files. Vilnius BASIC (Elektronika BK-0010-01, BK-0011M and UKNC computers) Visual Basic (Windows) – Microsoft's object-oriented dialect with
List_of_BASIC_dialects
Captain Harry S. DePuy organized the Upper Kootenay Navigation Company ("UKNC") and in the winter of 1891 to 1892, built at Jennings the small sternwheeler
Steamboats of the upper Columbia and Kootenay Rivers
Steamboats_of_the_upper_Columbia_and_Kootenay_Rivers
UKNC
UKNC
UKNC
UKNC
Boy/Male
Indian
Ornament of the worshippers
Boy/Male
Tamil
One who has conquered everything
Boy/Male
Hindu, Indian
Lord Vishnu
Boy/Male
Hindu
A deity
Boy/Male
Indian, Marathi
Early Morning; Dawn
Girl/Female
Bengali, Gujarati, Hindu, Indian, Kannada, Malayalam, Marathi, Sindhi, Tamil, Telugu
A Star
Surname or Lastname
English and French
English and French : from Middle English, Old French trivet, trevet ‘trivet’, ‘tripod’, presumably a nickname for someone who walked with a stick, or perhaps a metonymic occupational name for someone who made or used such articles.
Boy/Male
English
Bitter.
Boy/Male
Indian, Marathi
Sweet Basil
Boy/Male
Arabic
Servant of the Provider
UKNC
UKNC
UKNC
UKNC
UKNC