@steeph @keyboards I'm guessing it's not a CRT, unlike the old lunchboxes by Toshiba and Compaq. Yeah, I've never heard of Dolch either.
Huh, apparently this company survived until 2006, and made machines with up to a 486 processor. Of course there is a video about them on YouTube: https://youtu.be/feTVzbB9bCA

@unattributed @keyboards I can't watch the video right now. But I will later
Thanks! I think an LCD or TFT of the time couldn't look so clear. Colour contrast at an angle wasn't that good. But on the other hand I don't see any distortion. Still, that seems more likely to me. Also why wouldn't they make the whole device more compact.
It says 586 on the case. I would have guessed Pentium or K5.
I hope the keyboard feels the way it looks it would feel. I really like the overall look.
@unattributed @keyboards No yeah, I can see how a TFT and a PC fill the available space. It could have been more compact then though.
It would have been a bit early for LAN parties. But I wonder how easily it could be upgraded to a K6(-2) or an Athlon with a nice graphics card. Imagine bringing this thing to a LAN party.
@unattributed So I'm back at my PC and after looking into those machines some more it seems they didn't make many compromises regarding extensibility and quality. So that explains an LCD with a quality that surprised me for the age. But also it looks like it was introduced in the late 90s. High end colour LCDs advanced fast around that time, I imagine.
Everything about those machines is higher quality than I would have expected.
And they did make a Pentium II version. So at least a Pentium III would be possible as well. I imagine it would be simple to upgrade to a newer motherboard, too though. So my LAN party imagination is realistic :D
Although you'd have to have been a properly spoiled rich kid to bring one of those to a LAN party in the 2000s.
@keyboards