It's #retrocomputing time, and this time, I'm going to post one of my own retrocomputers.

Say hello to my #HP 200LX, one of my favorite #handheld #computers.

A basic rundown of the specs:

* 7.91 MHz Intel 80186
* CGA-compatible graphics
* 1-4 MiB RAM, 640k conventional, the remainder is a RAM disk (mine has 2 MiB)

https://mastodon.social/media/jk30gLkEj55lyXsnFmQ

#umpc #handhelds #computers #DOS

The HP LX family of #palmtops was far from the first to run DOS, though - the DIP Pocket PC (aka the #Atari Portfolio), the Poqet PC, and some others come to mind - but I'd argue that it was the best thought-out of them.

Most DOS palmtops were, at their heart, DOS machines first - you usually got a bare minimum of PDA functionality in the form of a TSR, but they expected you to run DOS applications to actually do anything.

HP did things... differently here, mainly thanks to #Lotus.

Lotus was developing a DOS-based personal information manager (PIM) intended for a PDA, but they weren't in the hardware business, and looked for hardware. Simultaneously, HP's calculator division was designing a DOS-based PDA, the 95LX, but hadn't gotten to the software yet.

Ultimately, Lotus designed the 95LX's System Manager and databases, with HP contributing an implementation of their RPN calculator.

The 95LX, however, was not fully PC compatible due to a low-resolution (240x128) screen, something that HP rectified with the (higher resolution, 640x200) 100LX.

With a rewrite of the System Manager's database system, HP released the 200LX. In my experience, especially for 1994, this is a /very/ solid PIM - as good as any other PDA of the time, nearly as good as, say, a Palm OS device.

I should probably post some screenshots.

The view when it starts up: https://mastodon.social/media/uwsShxRgs0okDLny6u0

2-pane file manager: https://mastodon.social/media/ejMQQmfkRFFXoQ9BaOU

Appointments: https://mastodon.social/media/oLK3rBopGmrK0dsyuf8

Phone book (note there's some skeuomorphism - also note that one of the default entries, the HP Palmtop Paper, is a third-party newsletter, from a company that still exists today, and still serves the HP LX community - http://www.palmtoppaper.com/): https://mastodon.social/media/R4MwpMMd__AIL9_TAF0

The Hp Palmtop Paper Online

HP Palmtop-We buy, sell, repair, upgrade 200LX, 100LX, 1000CX palmtops

@bhtooefr That is a hand held computer? How old is it? I didn't know HP ever made one. I bought my first pocket computer, a Casio BOSS, in 1989. I did fool around with the original Tandy handheld in 1981 while working at an early PC magazine.

@BertL The 200LX launched in 1994, as an update of the 100LX from 1993, which was in turn a redesign of the 95LX from 1991.

I'm seeing conflicting serial number decoding methods - one method has mine being made 1999-W42 (which would be one of the very last ones), the other has it being made 1994-W20 (which would be one of the very first ones).