Galeb (English = Seagull) was an 8-bit computer developed by PEL Varadin. It was largely inspired by the Compukit UK 101, Ohio Scientific Superboard and Superboard II computers that appeared in the U.K. and U.S.A. in 1979.
A grand total of 250 were produced by the end of the summer of 1984, before being replaced by Orao. (source Wikipedia)
Robert Kovac sent us this information about the Galeb (seagull) which was made by PEL Varazdin Co. and distributed by Velebit:
I don't know the start of production, but PEL Varazdin ended with production at the end of 1984 and there were only 250 units produced (so it is extremely rare). It was replaced by the Orao (eagle), better and cheaper model.
The computer was designed by Miroslav Kocjan, who also designed the Orao. It was built around a MOS 6502 processor and had 16 KB ROM with a built-in monitor and a modified version of Microsoft BASIC, and 9 KB RAM (expandable to 64KB). In text mode it could display 16 rows with 48 columns and, in graphic mode 48 lines with 96 pixels each (both modes only in monochrome). It had a built-in speaker which could produce 1 voice with 5 octaves.