How to solve Systems problems - Zilog's MCZ family Here's a rare advert from Zilog for its MCZ range of micros - everything from an entry-level floppy-disk-based model up to the MCZ 1/35 rack-mount machine with 10MB storage. The entry-level "low cost" machine retailed at around £4,000, or in the region of [[4000|1979]] in [[now]]. It was yet another Z80 micro, but that was fair enough as Zilog was the inventor and manufacture of that chip. The Z80 was originally released in 1976 as a much cheaper, more capable but binary-compatible replacement for Intel's 8080. This meant most significantly that the popular business operating-system-of-choice of the day - CP/M - would work without alteration, making Z80-based machines popuplar in the small-business world. CP/M in turn became known as the de-facto operating system for the Z80, and its success became largely driven by the success of the chip. The Z80 CPU ended up on machines like the TRS-80, Sinclair's ZX80, ZX81 and Spectrum, Amstrad's range of CPC micros, and countless other random boards and micros of the late 70s. Zilog was formed when three of Intel's 8080 designers left the company in 1974. Backed by funds from oil behemoth Exxon, it wasn't until around 1980 that Zilog actually made any money, even though its Z80 - along with MOS Technology's 6502 - accounted for much of the microcomputer CPU market for the decade between 1975 and 1985. The name Zilog apparently derived from "Z", meaning the last word (well, letter at least), "I" meaning "integrated" and Log for Logic - hence the "last word in integrated logic"[source: "A practical glossary", Practical Computing, August 1980, p. 174]. As well as that, it was unusual in that the company had its own comic-strip hero - Captain Zilog[source: http://www.computinghistory.org.uk/det/6608/Captain-Zilog-Issue-No-1/].