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Portable computers

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IBM 5100
portable computer released by IBM in 1975
portable computer
self-contained computer that is designed to be moved from one place to another
Macintosh Portable
portable computer by Apple
Commodore SX-64
luggable version of the Commodore 64 computer
Kaypro
Kaypro Corporation was an American home and personal computer manufacturer based in Solana Beach, California, in the 1980s. The company was founded by Non-Linear Systems (NLS) to compete with the popular Osborne 1 portable microcomputer. Kaypro produced a line of rugged, luggable CP/M-based computers sold with an extensive software bundle which supplanted its competitors and quickly became one of the top-selling personal computer lines of the early 1980s.
IBM Portable Personal Computer
IBM PC model released in 1984
Flipper Zero
multi-tool electronic device
Osborne Computer Corporation
American computer company (1980–1985)
Grundy NewBrain
microcomputer
Xerox NoteTaker
Notetaker
Amstrad PPC
portable IBM PC compatible computers
Q40405
Ultra-Mobile PC by HTC
Samsung Q1
Ultra-Mobile PC
Atari STacy
computer model
MCM/70
The MCM/70 is a pioneering microcomputer first built in 1973 in Toronto, Ontario, Canada, and released the next year. This makes it one of the first microcomputers in the world, the second to be shipped in completed form, and the first portable computer. The MCM/70 was the product of Micro Computer Machines, one of three related companies set up in Toronto in 1971 by Mers Kutt. It is considered by some historians to be the first usable personal microcomputer system.
AlphaSmart
AlphaSmart, Inc., formerly Intelligent Peripheral Devices, Inc., was an education technology company founded in 1992 by Apple Computer engineers Joe Barrus and Ketan Kothari, and Kothari's brother, Manish Kothari. At the time of their initial release in 1993, the first AlphaSmart models were marketed as smart keyboards designed to promote writing in the classroom as an alternative to expensive computer labs. The units' durability, long battery life, and limited functionality made them ideal for K-12 classrooms. Later models expanded functionality to spell-checking, running applications, and ac
Apricot Portable
personal computer