- Xerox NoteTaker
The Xerox NoteTaker was perhaps the first
portable computer . It was developed atXerox PARC inPalo Alto, California , in1976 . Although it did not enter production, and only around tenprototype s were built, it strongly influenced the design of the laterOsborne 1 andCompaq Portable computers.The NoteTaker was developed by a team that included Adele Goldberg,
Douglas Fairbairn , andLarry Tesler . It drew heavily on earlier research byAlan Kay , who had previously developed theDynabook project. While the Dynabook was a concept for a transportable computer that was impossible to implement with available technology, the NoteTaker was intended to show what could be done.The computer employed what was then highly advanced technology, including a built-in
monochrome display monitor, afloppy disk drive and a mouse. It had 128 kB of RAM, then a very large amount, and used a 1 MHz CPU. It used a version of theSmalltalk operating system that was written for theXerox Alto computer, which pioneered thegraphical user interface .The NoteTaker fitted into a case similar in form to that of a portable
sewing machine ; the keyboard folded out from the bottom to reveal the monitor and floppy drive. The form factor was later used on the highly successful "luggable" computers, including theOsborne 1 andCompaq Portable . However, these later models were about half as heavy as the NoteTaker, which weighed 22 kg (48 lb). Had the NoteTaker been produced commercially, it would likely have cost in excess of USD 50,000.Fact|date=August 2007External links
* [http://www.computerhistory.org/VirtualVisibleStorage/artifact_main.php?tax_id=04.02.01.00#5 Xerox NoteTaker] from the
Computer History Museum .
* [http://www.snarc.net/pda/pda-treatise.htm "The Evolution of the PDA"] , with an article on the NoteTaker.
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