It really amazes me how far we've come in the last 25 years and how much has remained the same. Here's to the next 25 and making fun of today's technology :)
My dad had a Toshiba T1200, the successor to this one. He still uses it as a serial terminal. On another note, due to its limited built-in storage, he ran command.com through pklite!
my first PC going to college in 1988,
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PPC_512 4.7Mhz, 512kb RAM and a floppy drive, it could run a fortran compiler (rather slowly)
Although if you had access to a TV and a power socket at the destination my Sinclair QL was probably a more capable and lighter 'portable'
It has an awesome design and it can also be seen in some movies (names don't come to mind though, but I've seen them), e.g. painted in some fancy color. :)
Me too. I haven't fired it up in at least a year, but last time I tried it booted up with no problem other than some alarming smoke coming from the air vent. Seeing that customized autoexec.bat float up in ghostly green letters really brought me back.
I had the first full-keyboard portable, the TRS-80 Model 100 which Dad was still using into the 90s. I also had the very first ultralight laptop - the NEC Ultralite (4lbs, no hard drive, solid-state!) back in '88.
Good times, but you spend a LOT to stay on the bleeding edge. :)
And that was a claim that didn't resist 15 seconds of googling.
There were a couple portables that could be called laptops before the Toshibas. The TRS-80 model 100, its NEC cousin. Even if we are talking of MS-DOS, PC-compatible computers, the Data General One predates this one by quite a bit.
No windows button and a properly placed control key where it should be? The caps lock is relegated to arrows territory? I'M FREAKING SOLD! Where do I get one? xD
The first laptop I used in real life was an Acorn A4 in around 1993. When things moved the screen blurred so much it was hard to use, but it did run RISC OS which I liked back then.
1991: Toshiba adds the first colour screens to laptops. From here on, portable PCs become more than work-obsessed business tools, and begin to pull double duty as entertainment machines.
If it has a USB port you can use either an external CDROM drive or a USB key drive.
If it has a network port then you can make a network boot floppy quite easily. This just contains enough to get the system booting off of an image retrieved from a TFTP server over the network.
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[ 3.3 ms ] story [ 80.4 ms ] threadJust stretching a simile to breaking point there..
That's the one that runs for a day or something on just AA batteries, isn't it?
Although if you had access to a TV and a power socket at the destination my Sinclair QL was probably a more capable and lighter 'portable'
It has an awesome design and it can also be seen in some movies (names don't come to mind though, but I've seen them), e.g. painted in some fancy color. :)
(edit: on second thought, it most likely requires at least two laps.)
Good times, but you spend a LOT to stay on the bleeding edge. :)
Specs: Dual 8bit Hitachi 6301 at 0.6 MHz, 16 kB RAM, 32 kB CMOS ROM
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Epson_HX-20
And that was a claim that didn't resist 15 seconds of googling.
There were a couple portables that could be called laptops before the Toshibas. The TRS-80 model 100, its NEC cousin. Even if we are talking of MS-DOS, PC-compatible computers, the Data General One predates this one by quite a bit.
The Epson HX-20 laptop also ran CP/M (as an option, AFAIK).
Not bad at all, considering the typical ~3 kg weight of many modern laptops.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Keyboard_layout#QWERTZ
http://toshibalife.com/featured-articles/25-years-laptop-inn...
If it has a network port then you can make a network boot floppy quite easily. This just contains enough to get the system booting off of an image retrieved from a TFTP server over the network.
I can't figure out a way to tell it to boot from a USB thumb drive. It doesn't list that option in the BIOS.
Would it still let me boot from an external CD ROM even though the BIOS doesn't mention USB? Maybe I could buy one.
Otherwise, any other thoughts?
Otherwise, you could maybe try a PCMCIA network card, assuming the laptop supports that.