The MUPID (short for "Mehrzweck Universell Programmierbarer Intelligenter Decoder" in German) or MUPID A320 was an early home computer like system introduced in 1981, designed and invented by Hermann Maurer at TU Graz, Austria[1] to be used as a Bildschirmtextterminal, but it was also capable of being used as a stand-alone computer.[2]
There were several model variations: the MUPID C2D (square case with separate keyboard) and MUPID C2D2 were available in Germany, the MUPID C2A2 or "Komfort MUPID" (later models) were available in Austria.[3]
The Mupid was also sold under other brands, as the Grundig PTC 100 (C2D2 variation in a different color) and the Siemens T3110 (C2D variation).[3]
A card for older IBM PC compatibles with an ISA slot was developed that gave a PC the same graphics capabilities as a MUPID.[4]
Mupid A320 keyboard and decoder (red)
MUPID C2D
MUPID C2D decoder
MUPID C2D keyboard
MUPID C2D display
Mupid C2A2
Mupid C2A2 keyboard
Mupid C2A2 disc drive
Siemens T3110
Siemens T3110 decoder
Siemens T3110 keyboard
Siemens T3110 display
The original Mupid A320 was followed in 1983 by the MUPID II.[1] This version supported the CEPT Prestel standard, had a better keyboard, a 320 × 240 graphics mode, four voice sound, two DIN6 joystick connectors, a DIN8 tape interface, a DB25 modem, a DE9 serial connector and a DIN8 external disk drive connector.[5]