- Epson HX-20
The Epson HX-20 (also known as the HC-20) is generally regarded as the first
laptop computer , announced in November 1981, although first sold widely in 1983. Hailed by BusinessWeek magazine as the "fourth revolution in personal computing", it is generally considered both the first notebook and handheld computer and it is for this reason that it is highly prized among collectors.With about the footprint of an A4 size page, the
Epson HX-20 features afull-transit keyboard, rechargeablenickel-cadmium batteries, a built-in 120 × 32-pixel LCD (smaller than that on manymobile phone s today) which allowed 4 lines of 20 characters, acalculator -sizedot-matrix printer , theEPSON BASIC programming language, 16 KbRAM expandable to 32 Kb and a built-inmicrocassette drive. It uses a proprietaryoperating system , which consists of the Epson Basic interpreter and asystem monitor program, and weighs approximately 1.6 kg. Known colours of the machine are silver and cream, while some prototypes were dark grey. The HX-20 was supplied with a grey carry case. An externalacoustic coupler , the CX-20, was available for the HX-20, as was an external floppy disk drive, the TF-20, and an external speech synthesisAugmentative Communication Device (ACD), ‘RealVoice’. The battery life of the HX-20 was approximately 50 hours.The later, more popular
TRS-80 Model 100 line , designed byKyocera , owed much to the design of the HX-20.imilar Epson models
* HC-80
* HC-88
* HX-40
* HX-45
* KX-1
* PX-16
* PX-4
* PX-8 (Geneva)
*QX-10 , QX-16
* EHT-30, EHT-40Problems
A common complaint found in most HX-20 computers today is the failure of the internal Ni-Cd rechargeable battery pack. The battery pack is easily replaced by a NiMH (or equivalent) battery pack. Changing the battery pack is not generally considered to reduce the collectible value of the computer, as doing so does not damage any internals.
An easy fix for replacement batteries is to use four AA cells in a holder secured on the inside. The leads can be easily soldered on to the connector from an original battery.
External links
* [http://www.epson.com/cgi-bin/Store/support/supDetail.jsp?BV_UseBVCookie=yes&oid=14492&infoType=Doc Epson’s HX-20 manual and additional material]
* [http://www.geocities.com/abcmcfarren/hx20/hx20.htm HX-20 utility and game programs]
* [http://www.old-computers.com/museum/computer.asp?c=143&st=1 old-computers.com article on the HX-20]
* [http://www.atarimagazines.com/creative/v9n3/101_Epson_HX20_computer.php 1983 review of the HX-20]
* [http://www.vintage-computer.com/epsonhx20.shtml vintage-computer.com article about the HX-20]
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