Xref: utzoo comp.terminals:657 comp.sys.ibm.pc:13815 misc.wanted:1980 comp.unix.xenix:1799 Path: utzoo!mnetor!uunet!husc6!bloom-beacon!arktouros!dyer From: dyer@arktouros.MIT.EDU (Steve Dyer) Newsgroups: comp.terminals,comp.sys.ibm.pc,misc.wanted,comp.unix.xenix Subject: Re: Cheap Laptop Terminals Message-ID: <4099@bloom-beacon.MIT.EDU> Date: 28 Mar 88 15:28:15 GMT References: <237@madnix.UUCP> <6208@dhw68k.cts.com> Sender: daemon@bloom-beacon.MIT.EDU Reply-To: dyer@arktouros.MIT.EDU (Steve Dyer) Organization: MIT Project Athena, Cambridge MA 02139 Lines: 34 Keywords: laptop terminal Summary: justaterminal >Now, my ideal would be rather more modest: *just* a terminal -- perhaps >with enough room to plug a (decent -- TB+, for example) MODEM in. >Of course, part of the reason for this is my deep-seated prejudice >against Intel chips and IBM PC-type things; more practically, I commute >from one place to another via bicycle. Therefore, I would prefer to >have less to break (it would be difficult to persuade me that of two >otherwise equivalent devices, one of which has some sort of disc drive >and other does not, that the one *with* the disc drive would be more >rugged), have less mass to lug around, and less to pay for. TI makes a series of portable LCD-based terminals which are a follow-on to their old Silent-700 terminals. I have also seen a portable VT100 LCD terminal advertised in the pages of Digital Review and/or DEC Professional. Let me say, however, that if you get a Toshiba T1000 with a "hard RAM" card, you won't ever have to use the floppy disk drive more than once. Drive C: (the boot disk) is in ROM, and drive D: is the non-volatile RAM. You can ignore drive A, the floppy disk. You can have Kermit or whatever you like sitting on drive D:, ready to run. Because of the economies of scale, you will be hard pressed to find a portable terminal substantially cheaper than the T1000 (or a similar machine.) The T1000 has also been designed for light weight; I'm sure the competing portable terminals will weigh a lot more. I don't like the 8088 particularly well either, but I'm not willing to pay a high premium for my prejudice if there's an 8088-based machine which does everything I need. Do you really want to carry around a Telebit TB+ on your bicycle?? :-) --- Steve Dyer dyer@arktouros.MIT.EDU dyer@spdcc.COM aka {harvard,husc6,ima,ihnp4,bbn,m2c}!spdcc!dyer