Equinox: A Word Processor, Data Base Manager and a computer all for £1,195 Parasitic Engineering of Albany, California, would go bust in 1983, but prior to that it had established a network of resellers for its Equinox 100 micro throughout Europe, including its UK dealer - Equinox Computer Systems Ltd. The Equinox 100, which had been built around George Morrow's WünderBuss - an improved S-100 backplane - didn't sell particularly well[source: Fire in the Valley: The Making of the Personal Computer. McGraw-Hill. ISBN 0071358927, p. 146] and the company switched over to producing upgrades for Tandy's TRS-80. However, the improvements that Morrow had helped make to the S-100 bus found their way into the IEEE S-100 standard[source: https://www.retrotechnology.com/herbs_stuff/d_morrow.html] which was ratified in 1983 - albeit too late to do much against the onslaught of the IBM PC. Meanwhile, Parasitic's UK offshoot seems to have dropped both the original Equinox and anything to do with the parent company's new direction, and so is selling the Series 5000 micro built by Industrial Micro Systems instead. It's one of a few systems around at the time that seem to ignore the fact that computers are already general-purpose devices and was instead pitched as a Word Processor, running the famous WordStar package, along with Mail-Merge and DataStar. It was otherwise a standard Z80A-based micro on an S-100 bus, with 12 slots. The advert also suggests that it used 5" floppy disks, however there was no such format so it would have been 5¼" minifloppies. Also available were 8" disk units if a bit more storage was required. The price of the Series 5000, with 64K RAM and the various software packages, was £1,995, or about [[1995|1981]] in [[now]]. However, to make it a full system you would also need the Televideo 912C terminal at £595 and maybe the NEC SpinWriter daisy-wheel printer, a snip at £1,850. That would be a total of £4,440, or [[4440|1982]] now.