Digico (computer company)

Digico Limited
digico, DIGICO Computers
IndustryComputer hardware
Founded1965
FoundersKeith Trickett and Avo Hiiemae
DefunctJanuary 30, 1984 (1984-01-30) (as independent company)
Fateacquired from the receiver by Centreway Industries plc
Headquarters,
Key people
Eric Lubbock (chairman)
Productsdata loggers, minicomputers, microcomputers

Digico was a British computer company founded in 1965. Digico was best known for its 16-bit minicomputer series, the Micro 16. Later Digico started manufacturing a networked CP/M based microcomputer system with business software options, named Digico Prince.

Company history

Digico was founded in 1965 by Keith Trickett and Avo Hiiemae, two ex-ICL electronics engineers. Former MP Eric Lubbock was chairman from 1969 to 1983.[1] The company was based in Letchworth initially, moving to a new factory in Stevenage in 1973[2] and employing about 90 staff.[3]

Digico's first product was a laboratory data-logging and spectrum analyser hardware system named DIGIAC. A prototype had been developed before Digico was formed, by the founders in a garage, so became an immediate source of income.[1] Digico soon developed a 16-bit minicomputer series, the Micro 16, for which it was best known for.[4]

In 1974 Digico had a turnover of over £1 million (equivalent to £9 million in 2023) and in 1977 well over £1 million.[5][6]

Spanverne Investments raised a large private capital investment into Digico in 1981, while the new Prince product was being developed.[7]

In October 1982, Digico announced it would close its Stevenage factory with the loss of 130 jobs within six months. This was part of a rationalisation plan to concentrate manufacturing at its large Leeds site. It would retain its Letchworth site primarily as a south England office.[8]

On 1 February 1984, the Financial Times reported that after a weekend of failed negotiation between British computer company Optim and Midland Bank, Digico went into receivership on 30 January 1984. Digico owed more that £400,000 to Midland Bank and over £1 million to other creditors. In 1983 debts to the bank had reached about £1.4 million, but were reduced when Optim bought Digico's maintenance contracts with about 1,500 customers for £750,000 in autumn 1983. The company had lost £2.5 million over the previous two years on an annual turnover of about £4 million (equivalent to £13,000,000 in 2023), and had closed its Letchworth factory retaining about 50 employees.[9]

Digico was acquired from the receiver by Centreway Industries plc for £265,000 in March 1984 and merged into its computer group.[10]

Digico Micro 16

Digico quickly started developing a general purpose 16-bit minicomputer, the Micro 16, which became available in 1966. Digico was assisted by the Ministry of Technology and the National Research Development Corporation in this development.[1][2][11] The first version produced was the Digico Micro 16S (1968), followed by the 16P (1970), then the 16V in 1972.[4][12]

Example applications
available for Micro 16V[13]
Animal feed mix control
Car park control
Census analysis
Electroencephalography
Gas chromatography
ICL 1900 front ending
Invoicing
Machine tool control
Mass spectrometry
Stock control
Typesetting

The Digico Micro 16V had a standard memory of 4k words with 950 nano second cycle time, expandable to 64k words, and able to support up to 64 external interfaces. It had an optional microprogrammed floating-point unit.[13] The Micro 16V was supported by a simple and flexibly sized executive that could optionally support multiprogramming, disc files and teletypes.[14] The Micro 16V used semiconductor memory, rather than magnetic-core memory as in the previous models.[15]

The instruction set architecture is single accumulator based with instructions generally having a consistent 12-bit address field. A direct address thus limits memory size to 4k (4096) words in the current selected memory region, named a "stack". Three instructions (load, store, add) permit indirect addressing where the direct address contains the 16-bit address of the operand. A carry register supports multi-word arithmetic; there is no integer multiply or divide instruction. One instruction uses the address field to specify a variety of non-addressing sub-instructions such as shift, carry manipulation and input-output. Floating-point arithmetic is handled by software or an optional floating-point unit with its own registers that can work in 32, 48 or 80-bit modes.[13]

The Micro 16 sold primarily into the data logging market until 1969, when it expanded into areas like process control, stock control and front-end processors for the ICL 1900 mainframe.[1][16]

In 1978 the Digico Micro 16E stackable minicomputer, which was well suited to an office environment, won a Design Council Award for Engineering Products.[17][18]

Digico Prince

In 1981,[19] Digico started manufacturing a CP/M based microcomputer with business software options, named Digico Prince, with a claimed unique seven year maintenance guarantee.[20][21]

A more sophisticated multi-user Digico Prince II system was also available. The Digico 3800 user terminal had three Zilog Z80A processors, 64 kilo-bytes of memory and optionally two floppy disk drives. Up to three Digico 3800s could be connected to a 3810, 3820 or 3830 master workstation with a shared 5 MB Winchester disk drive. Up to 32 of these clusters could further be connected locally or remotely to a Digico 7800 server based on a Digico Micro 16E, providing more shared disc capacity and remote access to IBM, ICL and Honeywell mainframe computers.[22]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d Hamilton, Ross (June 1997). Continuous Path: The Evolution of ProcesControl Technologies in Post-War Britain (PDF). Department of Computer Science (Thesis). University of Warwick. pp. 116, 120, 126. Retrieved 6 April 2019.
  2. ^ a b "Rugged simplicity pays off in mini computer sales". New Scientist. 10 May 1973. p. 342. Retrieved 7 April 2019.
  3. ^ "About Digico". digico working group. Archived from the original on 21 August 2013.
  4. ^ a b "Digico Hardware". digico working group. Archived from the original on 21 August 2013.
  5. ^ "Minicomputer manufacturers in Britain". New Scientist. 6 June 1974. p. 602. Retrieved 14 April 2019.
  6. ^ Eiloart, Tim (2 February 1978). "Progress chaser". New Scientist. p. 292. Retrieved 7 April 2019.
  7. ^ "Private placing raises £2m for computer group". The Times. London. 17 March 1981. p. 19. Retrieved 24 February 2026.
  8. ^ Thomas, Andrew (21 October 1982). "Digico plant to close". Computer Weekly. p. 56. Retrieved 9 February 2026.
  9. ^ Snoddy, Raymond (1 February 1984). "Digico calls in receiver". Financial Times. p. 6. Retrieved 9 February 2026.
  10. ^ "In brief". The Times. London. 6 March 1984. p. 18. Retrieved 9 February 2026. CENTREWAY INDUSTRIES has purchased from the receiver the business and assets of Digico, for £265,000. Digico is based in Leeds and manufactures mini and micro computers.
  11. ^ "NRDC backs low-cost computer". Electronics & Power. 14 (2): 81. February 1968. doi:10.1049/ep.1968.0080. Retrieved 23 July 2020.
  12. ^ Searle, Nigel (20 September 1973). "Computer problem-solver". New Scientist. p. 702. Retrieved 7 April 2019.
  13. ^ a b c micro 16v computer manual (PDF) (Report). Digico. Archived from the original (PDF) on 3 April 2019. Retrieved 6 April 2019.
  14. ^ Digico Micro 16V Executive data sheet (pdf) (Report). Digico. SA-5301-0-1. Retrieved 6 April 2019.
  15. ^ "Current Projects". digico working group. Archived from the original on 21 August 2013.
  16. ^ "Small machine at the front". New Scientist. 23 September 1971. p. 688. Retrieved 9 April 2019.
  17. ^ "Micro 16E". Design Council Slide Collection. 1978. Retrieved 1 January 2026.
  18. ^ "search - Micro 16E". Design Council Slide Collection. 1978. Retrieved 1 January 2026.
  19. ^ "DIGICO Computers - advert" (PDF). Practical Computing. 4 (8): 23. August 1981. Retrieved 11 February 2026. Starting from around £1,700 ... computer, visual display, diskette storage, add CP/M operating system
  20. ^ "The Prince — a micro computer that offers you everything" (PDF). Personal Computer World. 5 (3): 79. March 1982. Retrieved 1 January 2026.
  21. ^ "Digico 16V Computer Manuals". The ICL Computer Museum. Retrieved 1 January 2026.
  22. ^ "Multimicro Might" (PDF). International/OEM Edition. Datamation. February 1983. pp. 176·35–176·36. Retrieved 2 January 2026.