The selection of IC cards included memory expansion cards, a thesaurus dictionary, a Time and Expense Manager, an Investment Planner, a bilingual and 8-Language translators, an "Encyclopaedia of Wine" and even games like "Box Jockey" (a Sokoban clone),[1] Tetris, chess and backgammon.
A spreadsheet software card capable of handling 26 columns by 999 rows tables compatible with Lotus 1-2-3 was available too.
The devices opened in landscape rather than portrait orientation with the IC Cards slot position changed accordingly.
In 1991 Sharp released also a series of IC cards allowing programming in BASIC for the OZ-7000, thus turning the organizer to more a PDA-like device.
Newer Wizards had an integrated IR transmitter allowing data exchange with PCs or other OZ-9xxx devices.
The innovative design had the main features of the initial Zaurus line which continued this PDA family for Sharp.