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The Laptop, Circa 1968
Technologizer ^ | 7/04/2009 | Harry McCracken

Posted on 07/04/2009 5:35:25 PM PDT by sionnsar

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To: sionnsar

1968 was also the year of what is simply known as “The Demo”:

http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-8734787622017763097


61 posted on 07/05/2009 4:46:39 PM PDT by dfwgator
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To: Kirkwood

What command DID you use? After all those years, how about finally revealing the secret?


62 posted on 07/07/2009 7:58:42 AM PDT by Blue Highway
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To: JCG
I went into Computerland in November, 1982 specifically to purchase an Apple computer. It was $2400, had no software or disk drive and the screen was only 40 characters.

Then, he said, we have something they're calling the Volkswagen of computers, the Osborne I. It had a software bundle including word processing (WordStar), spreadsheet (SuperCalc) and, this month only, a certificate for a free copy of dBASEII. In addition it had two disk drives, a display that would scroll to 80 characters and was portable -- the first of its kind! And, best of all, just $1795 drive out.

And to think Apple even back thern was way over priced. No big surprise there.

63 posted on 07/07/2009 8:04:56 AM PDT by Blue Highway
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To: Blue Highway

“What command DID you use? After all those years, how about finally revealing the secret?”

I have no idea. That was like a couple of lifetimes ago. LOL


64 posted on 07/07/2009 10:02:49 PM PDT by Kirkwood
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To: sionnsar

We had these at one place I worked. It’s just an ASR-33 that doesn’t have a pedestal and comes with a carrying case. We were still using the ASR-33s into the early 90’s.

Much nicer is the TI Silent 700 terminal. It came out in ‘71.
http://www.computerhistory.org/collections/accession/X1612.99

I still have mine. It has the lower case option, local memory, and the parallel interface. Woo-hoo! About 12 lbs. Much better than an ASR-33 in a tuba case. ;)

I don’t have my original Kaypro II any more (traded it for a bench power supply, bench VOM and a handheld DVM), but I still have a souped-up Kaypro IV and Kaypro 10. The IV is really sweet: amber screen with manual adjustments, upgraded ROM, 256K RAM, 40MB hard drive, three internal half-height floppies—each one reads a different format—and an external 8” floppy connector.


65 posted on 07/09/2009 12:21:38 AM PDT by saundby
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To: sionnsar

That add pre-dates me a bit but it reminds me of my days at the dawn of the PC revolution. I was selling PCs out of a store front in West Hartford CT in the early 80’s. When I started, we sold California Computer Systems and Zeniths and then added Kaypros and Osbornes all running CPM...basically they were Wordstar machines (remember CTRL K?). We also sold Apple PC’s and Corvus hard drives.

Other random things I remember from then:

Videx Video cards (extend the screen from 40 to 80 colums)
Intro of the IBM PC, AT, XT, PCjr,
SSDD, DSDD floppies
They ‘grey” market
Intro of the Apple II, The Apple III, Lisa and the Mac
Visi Calc, Visi Dex, Visi File etc...
Multiplan
Drinking beer, eating pizza and stuffing memory chips into quadram memory cards till 3 am
40% - 50% margin on hardware


66 posted on 07/09/2009 7:21:28 AM PDT by leadpencil1 (jam)
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