• Many CP/M machines were designed to allow the full 16-bit address space of 64 KB to be populated by memory. This was problematic on the Exidy Sorcerer.
  • After Exidy went bankrupt, CompuData, which had changed its name to Tulip Computers, took-over and continued marketing the Sorcerer in Europe.
  • The Sorcerer was one of the early home computer systems, released in 1978 by the videogame company, Exidy.
  • Exidy Sorcerer. Bitmapped Z80 CPU Personal Computer.
  • Exidy Sorcerer. It's ovely! ... Loss of interest from Exidy saw no further development of the model past a debug revision (Sorcerer II).
  • Missing image Exidy_sorcerer.jpg Image:Exidy_sorcerer.jpg. Exidy Sorcerer. Some version had red-colored cursor keys in the numeric keypad.
  • The Sorcerer was one of the early home computer systems, released in 1978 by the videogame company, Exidy.
  • The Exidy Sorcerer is the computer that Dr. Bloom brought home in the first episode under the name of "Exidy S100 bus" The version Dr...