|
I owned one of these. They were truly the first pocketable DOS compatible computers. I got mine about 6 months after the introduction for about $240. The serial port and printer port expansions cost almost another $250 and I don't think I ever used the serial at all. The device itself worked well, but I just could not fit in in my pocket and gave up on it. It was a total bear to keep supplied with rechargables and file transfers were a real pain.
But, it really was a DOS computer (though it only ran straight text stuff and the DOS was Atari's (of Digital Research's) clone of MS DOS. Within a few month of the Atari's arrival a company named Poquet had a stellar model that cost far more but had an 80 collumn screen. HP also made a model or two that ran DOS before CE. The Atari was about the size of a video cassette tape (we'll soon be wondering what those once were....VCRs, what are they, my grandchildren will say.) The Poquet was thinner and blacker. The HP was about the size of a 720 of today and it eventually took the whole small market for MS DOS clamshell palmtops.
I am still not sure why they did not sell well.
I got a memory card too. I wonder how much I paid for it? I think it held 128k, yes, 1/8 of one meg. It was a lot of space, but not enough for what I wanted to do. Now, that I recall the whole deal, I think the day I gave up on the Portfoli was the day I replaced the watch style battery in the memory card (it was not flash, but a very low power precursor of flash memory) I followed the direction exactly leaving the card in the Portfolio to keep it charged while I replace the coin battery in the card. Well, I found out later that the Atari had to be kept running (it went into sleep mode if you didn't hit a key every minute) while changing the battery in the card. I lost everything on the card. I gave up.
By the way, if you search the Start Site you will find a review of some Bible software by yours truly (not software for the Atari Portfolio Pocket PC, but for the Atari ST- a color Mac clone). Those were heady days in the computer world.
|