Submitted by Read_Icculus_ t3_yflkdk in OldSchoolCool
Comments
HaikuBotStalksMe t1_iu4mlps wrote
"Battery can last 6 to 12 hours on a single charge!"
"Oh wow, so about three hours? That's actually pretty good."
Though back then they'd have said 1.5 to 2 hours, so probably 45 minutes - enough time for a lunch break or subway ride.
nicholasruunu t1_iu41x6f wrote
All the way to F12, impressive.
skoltroll t1_iu55eva wrote
Most businessmen had laptops at the time only went to F10. But his goes all the way to F12.
stakekake t1_iu679lf wrote
That means it's 20% better
kurujiru t1_iu77zjz wrote
Why not just make F10 two more? /spinaltap
nicholasruunu t1_iu55jy4 wrote
Unlocked capabilities never seen before!
u9Nails t1_iu42tt3 wrote
Be on the lookout for those workers slamming the F12 key! They know what's up.
RogerRabbit1234 t1_iu64lud wrote
Also thin and thick Ethernet cords.
SgtRamonRuiz t1_iu3z3rc wrote
With no internet
dasoomer t1_iu41yw3 wrote
It would be 4 years or so until the public Internet was introduced even. Crazy to think about.
SgtRamonRuiz t1_iu425dz wrote
An expensive typewriter!
Old-and-grumpy t1_iu5t2j8 wrote
You could email though. My brother and I used to write one another back then from different college campuses.
over__________9000 t1_iu88j3b wrote
They had public internet in 1989
dasoomer t1_iu8lddl wrote
Incorrect. Internet became public domain in 92/93. You're talking about the commercial availability which is entirely different.
over__________9000 t1_iu8p5gq wrote
Are you thinking of the web? That’s a separate thing from the internet.
dasoomer t1_iu8q7xg wrote
The public Internet, which your average Joe could use and sign up for in home use, was early 90s.
I was alive. We were one of the first people to get it.
[deleted] t1_iu8qh7o wrote
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dasoomer t1_iu8qvke wrote
In the early 1990s the Internet was big news ... In the fall of 1990, there were just 313,000 computers on the Internet; by 1996, there were close to 10 million. The networking idea became politicized during the 1992 Clinton–Gore election campaign, where the rhetoric of the information highway captured the public imagination. On taking office in 1993, the new administration set in place a range of government initiatives for a National Information Infrastructure aimed at ensuring that all American citizens ultimately gain access to the new networks.[20]
From wiki - the internet has been around for awhile. The public Internet has not.
nicholasruunu t1_iu4246u wrote
Had both external modem and ethernet card for the Toshiba slot!
u9Nails t1_iu42ogg wrote
AOL sends you a floppy disk
SgtRamonRuiz t1_iu42qsw wrote
I wonder where you’d find anything to connect to. Earliest I remember a friend’s dad connecting to the internet tied up the phone line for hours and he basically just said hi to a friend. There was nothing online for the average person to do.
nicholasruunu t1_iu432cx wrote
The internet basically consisted of BBS, bulletin boards hosted by Universities and such. It was before my time though.
Available-Fly-8268 t1_iu5l48k wrote
Some nerds/geeks had multiple phone lines with modems attached where folks could dial in and post messages similar to today's Craigslist or Kijiji. The first few years of the internet was pretty much about porn and Internet Relay Chat. Users who bought those Toshibas were I-T types and business people who wanted to do more work away from the office. I was in Field Service in that era, myself and many others were very impressed with that product. Networking at the office was only just beginning in that tyme as well. The floppy drive enabled users to copy or save a file to the disk, take the disk to another machine which had a printer attached and print the file. We called it sneaker net. The best part about being an I-T Guy in that era was the chicks.
Prowler1111 t1_iu44kyg wrote
Anyone remember The Globe ??
mechanab t1_iu4j1xb wrote
There was lots to connect to. CompuServe was already pretty big by this time. Lots of BBSs and universities. Listserv was just getting started I think.
I got my first modem around 1982. It was 300 baud and my mom was always pissed because I would be using the phone line for hours.
SgtRamonRuiz t1_iu4jr0h wrote
Lots of money for a listserv. I just can’t imagine being mobile and wanting/needing/being able to connect.
mechanab t1_iu4lor6 wrote
The mobility was for business. My older sister needed to travel for work and had one of those suitcase Compaq luggables. She would need to dial in as well. This was around 1986 I think.
Masters_1989 t1_iu7ir2d wrote
That's incredible. I never knew things started so early.
GoodOmens t1_iu4fp6f wrote
Trade Wars 2002!!!!
aricknight t1_iu5aoo3 wrote
I was more of a lord guy myself but for mentioning any BBS door you get an upvote.
kabekew t1_iu6ipl6 wrote
Compuserve, AOL and Prodigy were pretty popular back then, with online games, chat, message boards and downloadable software. For business there was Dow Jones where you could get stock quotes and financial news.
shambahlah t1_iu4rk6g wrote
No Internet but modems were a thing. You just had to be in the know, who to connect to.
TardisMaximus t1_iu75jkm wrote
BBS communities FTW!
TheRavenGrl t1_iu4c2ul wrote
I thought that was Ryan Stiles for a second.
RaptorBadgerPOWPOW t1_iu4m0n8 wrote
I could definitely see “fake computer salesman” as a Who’s Line game
TheFreakish t1_iu6hh51 wrote
Worst Who's line bit ever.
Cashbeking t1_iu49wbr wrote
Well I have a 3.5 inch floppy that I give away for free.
fangelo2 t1_iu4amwz wrote
I’ll see your 3.5 and raise you a 5.25 floppy . A real floppy
[deleted] t1_iu4c73r wrote
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TappedIn2111 t1_iu4ldaq wrote
And if you’re real nice it goes all the way to F12 ifyouknowwhatimean
skoltroll t1_iu55ivr wrote
winkwinknudgenudgesaynomore
IDKFA2017 t1_iu4kfvs wrote
Impressive, very nice. Let’s see Paul Allen’s laptop.
newMike3400 t1_iu5bkj6 wrote
His keyboard is eggshell and the letters are Roman and embossed.
maarski t1_iu4372w wrote
Ahh, a DIX ethernet connector. These were the days.
​
Trivia why DIX ?
>!Digital, IBM, Xerox!<
Kbdiggity t1_iu47epm wrote
What a weird place to put the dollar sign.
geizeskrank t1_iu48jkf wrote
Why ?
JrodRiga13 t1_iu4e95y wrote
Because in America we put the $ before the number. ($1, $2, $100). ( Just in case you're not trolling 😂)
geizeskrank t1_iu4i4x1 wrote
No I don't; but thanks, I didn't know.
mcds99 t1_iu4v7ki wrote
I worked for a company called Entree back then ,I sold a lot of those "portables" back then. I sold a lot of 8088, 80286, and 80386 processor based computers. The black one behind it had a red Gas Plasma display.
Available-Fly-8268 t1_iu5my88 wrote
16 address lines on the Front Side Bus. Whoa!
markedasred t1_iu44h2q wrote
A friend of mine went to Japan in the late 80s, and came back with a slimmer laptop than this, with a printer built in.
mechanab t1_iu4jkgm wrote
I remember something similar, but it was an 8086 and had a smaller monochrome screen.
fangelo2 t1_iu4ahuo wrote
C:\ Is all you saw when you turned it on.
smoky77211 t1_iu4ca7b wrote
Doubtful. It likely needed you to load DOS.
HaikuBotStalksMe t1_iu4mx7m wrote
I think by 1989, OSes were installed to local drive.
ItDoesntMatter59 t1_iu6nfyf wrote
Boot from floppy was normal. HDD was more expensive and my first pc had a 10mb drive.
Mb. Not gb.
HaikuBotStalksMe t1_iu6ty4v wrote
10 mb is huge for that time. The OS would have been like, what, 800 kilobytes? So after formatting and stuff, I'd figure you had 9.5 megs free.
Install DOS to hardrive, you have crazy fast boot times (probably 15 seconds instead of a minute), and still like 8.8 megabytes for all your text files.
I started computing in 1995ish with a 300ish meg hardrive (I think 320). It was reasonably sized until like 1999.
notacanuckskibum t1_iu6xe11 wrote
Things were changing so fast it’s hard to remember exactly where we were in which year. 1989 would have been about Windows 1.0.
Available-Fly-8268 t1_iu5lfl5 wrote
Type in WIN, hit return.
TheWausauDude t1_iu4gj9y wrote
I’ve got an old Ibm “portable” pc that’s more of a suitcase from 1983 laying around yet. It fires up but immediately takes you to what looks like an old version of Basic. While it has a hard drive I’m sure it’s probably bad as the light for it seems to just cycle on and off over and over.
notacanuckskibum t1_iu6x2qv wrote
The one where the keyboard acts as a lid, with a 3” screen and twin 5” floppy drives? I remember working on one of those. Geophysics and charting.
TheWausauDude t1_iu70y1f wrote
Yeah that’s it. The keyboard folds down and you have the little yellow monochrome screen on the left with the drives on the right. Keyboard connects with what appears to be a phone jack. It even has a carry case that zips up around it, but I can’t imagine lugging one of those around. Damn thing must weigh at least 20-30lbs.
notacanuckskibum t1_iu71gfe wrote
Yes. More a luggable than a laptop. But we were heading into rural Norway with Land Rovers and stuff. The ability to bring a computer of any type along was mind blowing at the time.
bigedthebad t1_iu5a1zd wrote
Back in those days, it was generally accepted that a PC would always cost about $3,000.
10YearJockItch t1_iu5yeev wrote
Man, my 2021 Galaxy smart phone doesn't even have a thin or a thick Ethernet port. What are you even doing, smart phone manufacturers?
Stumpy-the-dog t1_iu6ary0 wrote
Two serial ports.
a niner and a twenty-fiver.
Just in-case.
ramriot t1_iu4fogg wrote
I've owned laptops going back to almost that era & in current dollars the price has decreased about 10 fold & quite linearly.
Although it should be said that quality & robustness has gone down commensurally as well.
I did purchase for my SO a Panasonic toughbook some years back which was way more powerful yet only as robust as my early $4,995 Toshiba, it cost me $4,500 in 2010.
mechanab t1_iu4kie9 wrote
Those old Toshibas were great, but very expensive. I always ended up getting something cheaper.
zerobeat t1_iu5jmbm wrote
> Although it should be said that quality & robustness has gone down commensurally as well.
Except for the backlight and hinge. Oh my god there was nothing worse then that damn tube light burning out or the video cable giving out after a short time. Happened way too frequently, too early, and was incredibly expensive to fix.
de-funked t1_iu4mujh wrote
1400 baud dial up- no waiting! 😂
davewave3283 t1_iu4t08g wrote
The ability to do auto calculating spreadsheets instead of manually writing them out would have been worth 12k on its own.
shockeroo t1_iu4y0t3 wrote
And still a higher quality keyboard than you’ll find on any laptop produced this century!
aricknight t1_iu5b49x wrote
I had something very similar to this in the late 90s that I bought from a garage sale. I remember I used it to log on to BBS and through that BBS I used IRC because they had an IRC module. The first IRC chat I used on that system I told them what type of system I had and they banned me from the chat room because they thought I was lying because it was impossible to access IRC through such a system. :)
smb3d t1_iu6eub2 wrote
Interviewer: "How much life on that battery?"
Guy: "It's hard to say"
hahaha, about 10 minutes.
JohnSolomon46 t1_iu6mqoq wrote
I have two IBM P70 386 and one IBM P75, both portable computers like this one. The latter was $18,500 in 1989 when it was released. It’s a shame because I’m too computer illiterate to get any of the three running lol. They aren’t battery powered they are corded but fold into a slim package
19Jamie76 t1_iu76uhq wrote
I know what the kids are getting for Christmas.
Chub62 t1_iu7fatx wrote
Computer Chronicles. Been a while since my memory of Gary Kildall resurfaced. Long live CP/M.
Jimmy3OO t1_iu48wpe wrote
How did they manage to have a flat screen?
HaikuBotStalksMe t1_iu4n1wd wrote
Greyscale.
ThatsWhatPutinWants t1_iu49nu3 wrote
I feel like thats not accurate when adjusting for cutting edge technology market deflation and manufacturing curve. Anything technology related shouldnt be treated the same as a bicycle for example, when it comes to accurate inflation.
ga-co t1_iu4cwku wrote
So about that battery life…
JrodRiga13 t1_iu4e30g wrote
But how long is the battery life!!!!!
HaikuBotStalksMe t1_iu4n59w wrote
I have it on good authority that it's hard to say.
Available-Fly-8268 t1_iu5lr42 wrote
It was hit and miss with those batteries. Some lasted only a few minutes, some caught fire.
googleCookieMonster t1_iu5x6y9 wrote
Battery? What battery? What are you talking about? Have another floppy drive, why not TWO modems! And 12 function keys, what more do you want?
cowannago t1_iu4e40g wrote
That guy should be wearing an esd bracelet.
Careless_Rub_7996 t1_iu4flsl wrote
I work in IT, and my boss told me that during the 70s to 80s he had to take a bit of mortgage outta his house to buy a PC like the APPLE 3, for like almost 10grand, just for EXCEL.
mechanab t1_iu4jxk7 wrote
Apple IIIs were very expensive (not worth it). It wasn’t for Excel, it was probably VisiCalc.
TappedIn2111 t1_iu4l8nq wrote
‚It goes all the way to F12.‘
This might be my favourite quote ever.
[deleted] t1_iu4mrre wrote
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yertle38 t1_iu4mvcq wrote
We had a family friend who had a tech review column. I remember him showing me a ~$7000 Toshiba laptop in this timeframe - inflation calculator says $15k+ in today dollars. PCs have gotten so much more affordable!
gingeropolous t1_iu4mywy wrote
I miss that plastic
[deleted] t1_iu4nt1y wrote
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pezjunki t1_iu4ut6a wrote
Ha! My first work computer!! So heavy lugging it to Mexico City every week.
Available-Fly-8268 t1_iu5m3o9 wrote
I had the Compaq. It literally came in a suitcase. The screen was amber though so it was awesome.
SentrySappinMahSpy t1_iu54uv1 wrote
Is the guy on the far left from CNET?
[deleted] t1_iu5k24j wrote
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Badfish1060 t1_iu5te28 wrote
r/AWKWARD
gitarzan t1_iu5yhss wrote
My first IT job gave me one of those about 1992. It was a few years old, I was brought into the shop because I was a PC nut. The rest of the shop, and the facility, used dumb terminals on DEC-Net. It was kind of sluggish already by then. I used to bring in an AOL disk and download apps, copy them to a 3.5” disk and take them home. It was still just dialup, but I could do it non-my time.
jar1967 t1_iu6tecw wrote
Today it would be considered a valuable antique of fully functional example would sell for more than $12,000
tooth999 t1_iu7q4rd wrote
This just makes me think of they Hey Burkie story of him giving his NHL scouts these clunky laptops and all the other NHL scouts having their minds blown and scrambling to match.
Acanthocephala-Muted t1_iue03pk wrote
I was selling Apple systems back in the 80's and would routinely sell Apple II's, printers, software and some supplies ( a complete "system") for 5 to 8K. At 5000.00 that would be around 13,000.00 in today's dollars.
torwag t1_iu46l0g wrote
Even in 1989 they played this "battery lifetime is hard to say" game already 😂