Bring back some good or bad memories


ADVERTISEMENT

June 11, 2011

Pictures of the First Laptop Computer

Released in 1981 by the Osborne Computer Corporation, the Osborne 1 is considered to be the first true portable computer - it closes-up for protection, and has a carrying handle. It even has an optional battery pack, so it doesn't have to plugged into the 110VAC outlet for power.

While quite revolutionary, the Osborne does have its limitations. For example, the screen is only 5" (diagonal) in size, and can't display more than 52 characters per line of text. To compensate, you can actually scroll the screen display back and forth with the cursor keys to show lines of text up to 128 characters wide.

The Osborne was designed with transportation in mind - it had to be rugged and able to survive being moved about. That's one reason that the screen is so small - a larger and heavier screen would be more susceptable to damage.

The two pockets beneath the floppy drives work great for floppy disk storage, although the Osborne modem also fits perfectly in the the left pocket and plugs into the front-mounted "modem" port.

Designed as a true portable computer system - it can be considered airline carry-on luggage, and it will fit under the passenger seat of any commercial airliner.




1 comment:

  1. I remember these. They had a Z8088 4 MhZ processor and 128 KB of Random Access Memory (RAM), ran on O-DOS 1.2 (Osborn's proprietary operating system of the time. They weighed about 25 pounds, which made them a bit heavy to be lugging around all day and, because of their extremely slow speed and microscopic memory size, weren't really practical for much of anything other than to show off to other people that you had 2500 dollars to waste on whatever you wanted.

    ReplyDelete




FOLLOW US:
FacebookTumblrPinterestInstagram

CONTACT US

Browse by Decades

Popular Posts

Advertisement

09 10