MANUFACTURER
Compaq Computer Corporation
MODEL
Portable III
PROCESSOR / CLOCK
80286@12Mhz.
RAM INSTALLED / MAX
640k / 2048k
STORAGE
1x1.2Mb FDD, 1x20Mb HD
OS
MS-DOS 3.31
BUS
Proprietary
DISPLAY
Orange Plasma monochrome (CGA resolution)
YEAR INTRODUCED
1989
COMMENTS
Neat pop-up display. Lunch-box design
Compaq Portable III
"Lunchbox"
Compaq Portable III was definitely one of the finest portable computers of its day. The one pictured above
is the base version of the computer. The basic configuration includes 640K of RAM memory, a 20MB internal
hard drive, an internal 5.25", 1.2MB high-density floppy drive, and the adjustable gas plasma display.
Also included are parallel, serial, and RGB monitor ports. The computer is AC powered. The base version of
the Portable III (Model 20) had a list price of 4,999ドル. Another version, the Model 40 (40 MB hard drive) was
available at 5,799ドル DOS 3.3 was an extra 120ドル. My unit has an optional 2400 baud internal modem. I don't
know the price of that modem, but they listed the slower 1200 baud
version at 349ドル. Compaq was a top-flight computer and the price was a little steep even for that time.
Prices listed were in effect in 1988.
The original Compaq Portable was a fairly large unit that looked like a
portable sewing machine when it was all packed up. The machine was followed by the Compaq Portable II.
This second-generation machine was nearly as heavy as the original Portable, but had trimmer dimensions and
the original machines' 8088 processor was upgraded to a 8 MHz 80286 processor. This brings us up to the
introduction of the Portable III. For most uses, this was a much better machine. Probably the most noticeable
drawback for some users was the Portable III lacked internal expansion ports. Compaq offered an external
expansion unit that could hold two full-length expansion cards. The unit attached to the rear of the computer
and listed for 199ドル. The Compaq Portable III had been improved in several ways over the earlier machines.
First of all, I would say it is roughly half the size of the original Portable. Secondly, though not exactly
a lightweight, (at 20 lbs.), it was at least 6 lbs lighter than the earlier designs. The footprint of the
"lunch box" style case occupies about half the space of the older designs, or a traditional
desktop computer. The reductions in size and weight made it much less of a chore to shuttle the computer
between home and the office.
The good news is that the Portable III performed as well as most decent desktop computers. The 12 MHz 80286
was fully twice as fast as the original IBM PC/AT and capable of running most
applications. The RAM could be expanded all the way up to 6.6MB. Last, but certainly not least, the gas
plasma display was quite useable. The screen had a maximum resolution of 640 x 400. It was much easier to
read than most LCD screens available at the time. The thin folding screen was largely responsible for the
size and weight reductions in the newer machine.