Cambridge Systems Technology (CST) was a company formed in the early 1980s by ex-Torch Computers engineers David Oliver and Martin Baines, to produce peripherals for the BBC Micro, and later, with Graham Priestley, Sinclair QL microcomputers.
[1][2] Products included IEEE 488, floppy disk and SCSI interfaces.
[2][3] Following the demise of the Sinclair QL in 1986, CST began producing the Thor series of QL-compatible personal computers.
[2] These had limited commercial success, and CST had ceased trading by the end of the decade.
This article about a company of the UK is a stub.