- Compaq Portable series
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Compaq's first computers were portable 'lunchbox' or 'luggable' computers, and as such belong to the Compaq Portable series. These computers measured approximately 1×1 foot on the side, and were approx. 2½ ft wide. As the products evolved, laptops and notebooks were created offing a new level of portability that caused the market to explode.
Some of the portables (the Portable and Portable II) had CRT monitors, while others (the Portable III and the Portable 386) had flat, single-color, usually amber, plasma displays. The portables came/could come with internal hard disk drives on .5" shock mount springs; diskette drives, usually 5 1/4" double- or quadruple-density drives; batteries; and/or a dual-ISA expansion chassis, about one full-drive-height wide. Later products included mono and color LCD screens and were battery powered.
Machines of the series
- Compaq Portable – Compaq's first computer; first 100% IBM PC compatible
- Compaq Portable Plus – Compaq's version of the PC-XT with built in hard drive
- Compaq Portable 286
- Compaq Portable II
- Compaq Portable III
- Compaq Portable 386
- Compaq Portable 486 and Compaq Portable 486c
- Compaq SLT laptop series
- Compaq LTE notebook series - intially co-developed with Citizen Watch Company and later with Inventec
- Compaq Aero subnotebook series
- Compaq Contura value notebook series
- Compaq Concerto pen table convertible
Sources
- Recycled Goods product descriptions
- Steve Leach - former Compaq portables division product manager
Categories:- Microcomputer stubs
- Portable computers
- IBM PC compatibles
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