- Leading Edge (company)
Leading Edge Hardware Products, Inc. was a computer manufacturer in the 1980s and the 1990s. They were based in Westborough,
Massachusetts .History
Leading Edge was founded in 1980. At the outset, they were a PC peripherals company selling "Elephant" brand floppy disk media ("Elephant. Never forgets"), and acting as the sole North American distributor/reseller of printers from the Japanese manufacturer, C. Itoh, the most memorable being the popular low-end dot-matrix printer, "The Gorilla Banana." In 1984, they began to use
Daewoo parts, and in 1989, they were acquired by Daewoo, as part of their recovery from Chapter 11 bankruptcy. ["Deal by Daewoo," New York Times,June 1 1989 , pg. D4] In October, 1995, Daewoo sold the company to Manuhold Investment AG, a Swiss electronics company. Leading Edge had sold 185,000 of its PC clones in the United States in 1994, but in 1995 sales fell from 90,000 in the first half to almost none in the second half. [Steve Lohr, "Frustrated users sue PC maker over busy signals on "help" line," New York Times,6 February 1996 , pg. D10] By 1997 the company was defunct. [ [http://weeklywire.com/ww/09-15-97/alibi_brave.html] David O. Dabney, "Power Down:Apple Buys Its Own Clones," Weeklywire.com,15 September 1997 , refers to " the now defunct Leading Edge PC clone company"]Products
The first known computer to be produced by Leading Edge is the Model M, released in 1982. By 1986 it sold for $1695 (US) with a monitor and two floppy drives. It used an Intel 8088-2 processor, running at a maximum of 7.16 MHz on an 8 bit bus, compared to 6 MHz for the IBM PC-AT on a 16 bit bus. The 'M' stands for
Mitsubishi , their parts provider.Peter H. Lewis, "Peripherals: Leading Edge: One name, two computers," New York Times,March 18 1986 , pg. C5]They also produced the Leading Edge Word Processor. It was described as easy to use, created automatic backup copies, and loaded in 256 K of RAM, described as a "large" amount. With the program in memory, both floppy drives were available for storage. It was introduced in 1983, and sold in 1984 for $100. (U.S.) ["Word processing," New York Times,
28 October 1984 , pg. AS 24. ]In 1984, Leading Edge also released an innovative database application called Nutshell (developed by a company called Nashoba Systems and distributed by
Leading Edge ). Nutshell was an earlier form of a program later released asFileMaker and subsequentlyFileMaker Pro .They began producing the
Leading Edge Model D in June, 1985, when they began to use Daewoo parts. That model was described as "the quality is good and the price is right." It was a Consumer Reports "Best Buy." It was IBM compatible, using the same Intel 8088 8 bit processor as the IBM PC, with two floppy disc drives, 256K of RAM, and an amber monitor. The machine sold for $1495 (US) ["A thrifty and practical computer from Korea," New York Times,July 16 1985 , pg. C4] They sold 125,000 in the first 13 months, then reduced the price to $1295 (US). [ Nicholas D. Kristov, "Low-priced cars and electronics from South Korea flooding the U.S.," New York Times,31 August 1986 , pg. A1]When IBM started offering 20 meg hard drives as standard for its newer PC-XT's, Leading Edge offered a 30 meg hard drive standard. [Eric Sandberg Diment, "Race for hard drive horsepower heats up," New York Times,
9 September 1986 , pg. C4] They later released a Model D86 (anIntel 8086 ), Model D2 in 1988 with a 65 meg hard drive for $2495(US) and a 10 MHz processor (anIntel 80286 ) [L.R. Shannon, "A powerful XT clone," New York Times,March 17 1988 , pg. C9] and Model D3 (anIntel 80386 ).In 1993, Leading Edge offered the WinPro Series of computers. These computers had then a
i486 orIntel 80486 processors. The low end model had an i486 SX25 processor—which lacked an FPU. The i486 DX33 Processor had the FPU in. The computers had a 3.5 inch floppy, a 5.25 in floppy, 170MB hard drive, with 4MB of RAM, which could be expanded to 20MB if needed. Windows 3.1 and MS-DOS 5.0 were the operating systems. The cost of a Leading Edge Computer ranged from $1299.99 to $2199.99 during this time.In 1994, Leading Edge offered the Wintower 486 Multimedia PC, with 66 MHz processor, 8 meg ram, 340 meg hard drive, 2 floppies, CD ROM, modem, sound card and monitor for a "street price" of $2600 (US). [ [http://www.findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m1563/is_n7_v12/ai_16175996] Angela Gunn, "Not on the cutting edge - Leading Edge Products' WinTower 486 multimedia PC - Hardware Review - Evaluation," Home Office Computing, July, 1994. retrieved
31 October 2006 ]Notes
References
* [http://www.answers.com/topic/leading-edge Leading Edge on Answers.com]
* [http://www.atarimagazines.com/compute/issue86/007_1_IBM_Compatibles.php Compute! Issue 86, July 1987. IBM Compatibles - The Universe Expands] refers to Leading Edge as a "young and aggressive" company.External links
* [http://www.rainbowdatainc.com/files/_FileList.txt Mirror of Leading Edge's old BBS]
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