Osborne Laptops & Desktops Driver



  1. Osborne Laptops Store
  2. Osborne Laptops For Senior Citizens
  3. Osborne Laptops For Sale

The first mass-produced microprocessor-based portable computer released in 1981 was the Osborne 1, developed by Osborne, which owed much to the NoteTaker's design. The company had early success with the design and went public but later due to small screen sizes and other devices being released found trouble selling the Osborne.

  1. The Osborne 1, the world’s first portable computer, and its quickly appearing competitors, were suitcase-sized, 20-30 pound computers soon known as “luggables.” The Osborne 1 used the CP/M operating system, the first industry standard operating system, and had two disk drives and a 5” built-in screen.
  2. Osborne 1 Personal Business Computer. Osborne 1 appears to be a huge market hit—in September, 1981, Osborne Computer Company has its first US$1 million sales month. In the first 8 months since its introduction, 11000 Osborne 1 computers ship.
  3. Adam Osborne founded Osborne Computer and formed the Osborne 1 in 1981. The Osborne 1 had a five-inch screen, incorporating a modem port, two 5 1/4 floppy drives, and big collection of bundled software applications. An aftermarket battery pack was available. The computer company was a failure and did not last for very long.
  4. The Osborne Vixen (an ill-tempered or quarrelsome woman) was conceived as the 'evolution of the revolution' - the latest and greatest of the popular Osborne portable computer systems, which first hit the market three years earlier in 1981.
Osborne 1
DeveloperAdam Osborne
ManufacturerOsborne Computer Corporation
TypePortable computer
Release dateApril 3, 1981; 39 years ago
Introductory priceUS$1795(today $5047.94)
Discontinued1983
Operating systemCP/M
CPUZilog Z80 @ 4.0 MHz
Memory64 KB RAM
Display5″ monochrome CRT display
SuccessorOsborne Executive

The Osborne 1 is the first commercially successful portable microcomputer, released on April 3, 1981 by Osborne Computer Corporation.[1] It weighs 10.7 kg (24.5 lb), cost US$1,795, and runs the CP/M 2.2 operating system. It is powered from a wall socket, as it has no on-board battery, but it is still classed as a portable device since it can be hand-carried when packed.

The computer shipped with a large bundle of software that was almost equivalent in value to the machine itself, a practice adopted by other CP/M computer vendors. Competitors quickly appeared, such as the Kaypro II.

History[edit]

The Osborne 1 was developed by Adam Osborne and designed by Lee Felsenstein, first announced in early 1981. Osborne, an author of computer books decided that he wanted to break the price of computers. The computer's design was based largely on the Xerox NoteTaker, a prototype developed at Xerox PARC in 1976 by Alan Kay.[2] It was designed to be portable, with a rugged ABS plastic case and a handle.[3] The Osborne 1 is about the size and weight of a sewing machine and was advertised as the only computer that would fit underneath an airline seat.[4] It is now classified as a 'luggable' computer when compared to those later 'laptop' designs such as the Epson HX-20.

The Osborne 1 was described as 'a cross between a World War II field radio and a shrunken instrument panel of a DC-3',[5] and Felstenstein admitted that carrying two of them to a trade show 'nearly pulled my arms out of their sockets'.[6] The computer nonetheless amazed observers; InfoWorld reported that 'By far the most frequently asked question at' the West Coast Computer Faire 'was, 'What do you think of the new Osborne computer?'[7]BYTE Magazine wrote: '(1) it will cost $1795, and (2) it's portable!'[8] The word processing, spreadsheet, and other bundled software alone was worth $1,500; as InfoWorld stated in an April 1981 front-page article on the new computer after listing the included software, 'In case you think the price printed above was a mistake, we'll repeat it: $1795'.[9][10]

West Coast Computer Faire attendees stated, InfoWorld said, that the Osborne 1 'represented an advancement of the price/performance ratio for microcomputers'.[7] Adam Osborne agreed but emphasized the price, stating that its performance was 'merely adequate': 'It is not the fastest microcomputer, it doesn't have huge amounts of disk storage space, and it is not especially expandable.'[9] Beyond the price, advertisements emphasized the computer's portability and bundled software.[11] The company sold 11,000 units in the first eight months of sales, and sales at their peak reached 10,000 units per month.[12]

Desktops

The Osborne 1's principal deficiencies are a tiny 5-inch (13 cm) display screen, use of single-sided, single-density floppy disk drives which store 90K per disk, and considerable unit weight. Adam Osborne decided to use single-sided disk drives out of concern about double-sided drives suffering head damage from rough handling. A single-density disk controller was used to keep costs down.

In September 1981, Osborne Computer Company had its first $1 million sales month. Sales were hurt by the company's premature announcement of superior successor machines which replaced the Osborne1's 40 character screens with an 80 character screen such as the Osborne Executive,[13] a phenomenon later called the Osborne effect. From 1982 to 1985, the company published The Portable Companion, a magazine for Osborne users.[14]

Early production[edit]

The company initially had ten prototypes produced, as described in an email by Felstenstein:[15]

I can confirm that this is one of the first ten prototype units built, known as the 'metal case' units. I don't think they had serial numbers. The cases were made by Galgon Industries in Hayward, California but their quote for production was prohibitive, so work immediately commenced on the plastic cases. The circuit board was ready in January 1981 and these were built shortly thereafter. They were used in the first ads ('the guy on the left doesn't stand a chance') in which the veins on the hand of the guy on the right bulge as he struggles with the 30-pound weight of his transformer-powered luggable. These were the units we took to the West Coast Computer Faire and the National Computer Conference in early 1981.

Competition[edit]

The computer was widely imitated as several other computer companies began offering low-priced portable computers with bundled software. The Osborne's popularity was surpassed by the similar Kaypro II which has a larger, 9 inches (23 cm) CRT that can display 80 characters on 24 lines, and double density floppies that can store twice as much data. Osborne Computer Corporation was unable to effectively respond to Kaypro until after 8-bit, CP/M-based computers were obsolete.

In 1981, IBM released the 16-bit IBM PC which is significantly more powerful and expandable.[3] Following the release of the IBM-compatible Compaq Portable in 1983, the market for CP/M computers shrank and Osborne was unable to compete.

Osborne Laptops Store

Architecture[edit]

Later model Osborne 1 with the redesigned case

The 64 KB main memory is made of four rows of eight type 4116 dynamic RAM chips, each with 16,384 bits. Memory is shared, with 60 KB available for software and 4 KB reserved for video memory. No parity is provided and no provision for memory expansion exists on the motherboard. The boot program loader and significant parts of the BIOS are stored in a 4 kilobyte EPROM, which is bank-switched. A second EPROM is used as a fixed character generator, providing upper and lower case ASCII characters and graphic symbols; the character generator is not accessible to the CPU. The eighth bit of an ASCII character is used to select underlined characters. Serial communications is through a memory-mapped Motorola MC6850 Asynchronous Communications Interface Adapter (ACIA); a jumper on the motherboard allows the MC6850 to be set for either 300 and 1200 baud or 600 and 2400 baud communications, but other bit rates are not available.[16]

The floppy disk drives are interfaced through a Fujitsu 8877 disk controller integrated circuit, a second-source of the Western Digital 1793. The parallel port is connected through a memory-mapped Motorola MC6821 Peripheral Interface Adapter (PIA) which allows the port to be fully bidirectional; the Osborne manuals claim that the port implemented the IEEE-488 interface bus but this is rarely used. The parallel port use a card-edge connector etched on the main board, exposed through a hole in the case; any IEEE-488 or printer cable has to be modified for the Osborne.[16]

The diskette drives installed in the Osborne 1 are Siemens FDD 100-5s (MPI drives were also used later), which were actually manufactured in California by GSI, a drive manufacturer that the German firm had purchased. They utilize a custom controller board that Osborne produced, which among other things has a single connector for the power and data lines. The FDD 100-5 was trouble-prone as Osborne's quality control was lacking, and many of the controller boards have soldering defects. In addition, the drive cable is not keyed and can be easily installed upside-down, which shorts out components in the computer. There are also problems with the drive head going past track 0 and getting stuck in place. The combo power/data cable also has a tendency of overheating.[16]

The video system use part of the main memory and TTL logic to provide video and sync to an internal 5-inch monochrome monitor. The same signals are provided on a card edge connector for an external monitor; both internal and external monitor display the same video format.[16]

The processor, memory, floppy controller, PIA, ACIA and EPROMs are interconnected with standard TTL devices.[16]

Laptops

The Osborne 1 has bank switched memory. Unusually for a system based on the Z80, all I/O is memory mapped, and the Z80 I/O instructions are only used to select memory banks. Bank 1 is 'normal' mode, where user programs ran; this includes a 4 kB area at the top of the address space which is video memory. Bank 2 is called 'shadow'. The first 4 kB of this address space is the ROM, and 4 kB is reserved for the on-board I/O ports: The disk controller, the keyboard, the parallel port PIA, the serial port ACIA, and a second PIA chip used for the video system. All memory above the first 16 KB is the same memory as Bank 1. This is the mode of the system on power up, because this is where the boot ROM was mapped. Bank 3 has only 4 kb by 1 bit of memory, used solely to hold the 'dim' attribute of the video system.

Operating system[edit]

The computer runs on the [4]CP/M 2.2operating system. A complete listing of the ROMBIOS is in the Osborne technical manual.[16]

Software[edit]

Osborne Laptops & Desktops DriverOsborne laptops for seniors
The 500+ page Osborne 1 user manual contains instructions on the hardware, WordStar, Supercalc, BASIC software and the CP/M operating system and utilities

The Osborne 1 comes with a bundle of application software with a retail value of more than US$1500, including the WordStarword processor, SuperCalc spreadsheet, and the CBASIC and MBASIC programming languages.[10] The exact contents of the bundled software varies depending on the time of purchase; for example, dBASE II was not included with the first systems sold.

Program NameVersionPublished byProgram TypeDatePart NumberNumber
of
Disks
CP/M2.2Digital ResearchDisk Operating System19813D01140-011
AMCALL2.06Utility2B50002-001
CBASIC2Digital ResearchLanguage compiler1979
MBASICMicrosoftLanguage interpreter301002-02D1
Colossal CaveGame
DeadlineInfocomGame2
dBase II2.41Ashton-TateDatabase
dBase II TutorAshton TateTraining for database6
Nominal Ledger2.7PeachTree SoftwareBusiness Software19832X09200-042
Purchase Ledger2.7PeachTree SoftwareBusiness Software19832X09200-042
Sales Ledger2.7PeachTree SoftwareBusiness Software19832X09200-042
SuperCalc1.12SorcimSpreadsheet1981301002-03 or 3D01160-011
WordStar2.26MicroProWord processor19813D01150-011

Hardware[edit]

  • Dual 5¼-inch, single-sided 40 track floppy disk drives ('dual density' upgrade available)
  • 4 MHzZ80CPU
  • 64 kilobytes main memory
  • Fold-down 69 key detachable keyboard doubling as the computer case's lid
  • 5-inch, 52 character × 24 line monochromeCRT display, mapped as a window on 128 × 32 character display memory
  • Parallelprinter port configurable as an IEEE-488 port
  • RS-232 compatible 1200 or 300 baud Serial port for use with external modems or serial printers

The Osborne 1 is powered by a wall plug with a switched-mode power supply, and has no internal battery. An aftermarket battery pack offering 1-hour run-time is available, and connected to the system through a front panel socket. Early models (tan case) are wired for 120 V or 240 V only.[16] Later models (blue case, shipping after May 1982) can be switched by the user to run on either 120 V or 230 V, 50 or 60 Hz.[16] There is no internal fan; a hatch at the top of the (blue) case can be opened for ventilation.

Peripherals[edit]

Additional peripherals were available from third-party vendors during the life of the Osborne 1.

  • External Monochrome display. This uses separate monochrome synch and video connections driven by the motherboard video circuitry.
  • Parallel Dot matrix printer. Manufactured by Star
  • 300 baudmodem. Fits into a diskette storage pocket and powered from the motherboard.

Aftermarket vendors offered several other upgrades to the basic model, including third-party double density disk drives, external hard disks, and a battery-backed RAM disk that fits in a disk storage compartment.

The Osborne corporation offered a 'Screen-Pac' column upgrade that could be switched between original 52 column, 80 column and 104 column modes. Osborne 1 systems with the Screen-Pac upgrade have an RCA jack installed on the front panel to allow users to connect an external composite video monitor.[17] This modification was developed in Australia by Geoff Cohen and Stuart Ritchie, and taken to the US by Stuart who turned up unannounced and sat outside Adam Osborne's office for two days. Osborne bought the mod and both of them worked with the company to implement the mod. As a nod toward where it came from it was called the 'Koala Project'. Geoff developed other upgrades for Osborne's and was regarded as the Australian expert on the computers.

Games[edit]

ADVENT (Colossal Cave Adventure) running on an Osborne Computer c. 1982

Since, like most CP/M systems, the display of the Osborne does not support bit-mapped graphics, games are typically character based games, like Hamurabi or text adventures (the 1982 game Deadline, for example, packaged in a dossier type folder and came on two 5​14' diskettes.). Compiled and MBASIC interpreted versions of Colossal Cave Adventure are available for the Osborne. Some type in games use the Osborne's character-mode graphics.[18]

Reception[edit]

InfoWorld reported that Osborne's booth at the April 1981 West Coast Computer Faire 'was packed for the entire show'. Although attendees' opinions were divided—some praised the computer, while others said that the screen was too small—many agreed 'that the Osborne 1 represented an advancement of the price/performance ratio for microcomputers', the magazine said.[7]Jerry Pournelle wrote that the small size of the Osborne's screen surprised him by not being a problem, and stated that after using it at Caltech when Voyager 1 arrived at Saturn, 'a dozen science writers were ready to go buy an Osborne 1'. He added, 'I was able to type ... without disrupting the meeting at all. The Osborne 1 is quiet and efficient and not at all distracting ... You can't beat it for the price, under $2000 bucks with over a thousand dollars' worth of software. An Osborne and an Epson printer will put you in the computing/word-processing business cheaper than anything I can think of'.[19]BYTE stated 'If you need a solid, well-supported, well-documented business system at a reasonable price, you should give [the Osborne 1] a great deal of consideration'. The reviewer calculated that after subtracting $1530 for the retail price of the bundled software the price of the computer was 'only $265 ... in a way you are getting a software package with a computer thrown in for (almost) free'. He praised the quality of the documentation, and agreed with Pournelle that the screen's size did not cause difficulty.[10]James Fallows agreed that the screen, although 'the size of a postcard ... is much easier to read than that would suggest', and described the computer as 'the best bargain on computer power in the business'.[20]

In 1981, the daily Israeli newspaper Maariv, provided several Osborne 1 to its reporters. The computers were equipped with acoustic couplers. This configuration allowed a reporter to submit an article digitally directly from the field to the newsroom. Maariv used a localized version of Osborne 1 that supported Hebrew.[citation needed] Freelance journalist David Kline praised the Osborne 1's durability, reporting in 1982 that the 'damage inflicted by arrogant customs officers, airport police, vengeful Paris bellhops and opium-fogged Pakistani cabbies were entirely cosmetic'.[21] Stating that a computer that weighs 30 pounds 'really isn't very portable', Creative Computing in 1984 concluded that 'the main reason that the Osborne was a success was not that it was transportable, but that it came with a pile of bundled software'.[22]

Osborne Laptops & Desktops Driver

References[edit]

Osborne Laptops For Senior Citizens

  1. ^Spector, Lincoln (May 31, 2010). 'A History of Portable Computing'. PC World. Retrieved April 3, 2019.
  2. ^'Xerox NoteTaker'. Computer History. Archived from the original on July 8, 2010. Retrieved May 21, 2010.
  3. ^ ab'Osborne 1'. OldComputers.net. Retrieved May 21, 2010.
  4. ^ abFallows, James (July 1982). 'Living With a Computer'. Atlantic Magazine. Retrieved May 21, 2010.
  5. ^'Computers: Carry Along, Punch In, Read Out'. Time. Time Inc. June 21, 1982. Retrieved April 3, 2011.
  6. ^McCracken, Harry (April 1, 2011). 'Osborne!'. Technologizer. Retrieved April 3, 2011.
  7. ^ abcHogan, Thom (May 11, 1981). 'New Computers Cause Hardware Wars'. InfoWorld. pp. 1, 6. Retrieved April 17, 2019.
  8. ^Morgan, Chris (April 1981). 'New Trends in Portability: The Osborne 1'. BYTE. p. 8. Retrieved October 18, 2013.
  9. ^ abHogan, Thom (April 13, 1981). 'Osborne Introduces Portable Computer'. InfoWorld. IDG. p. 1. Retrieved April 4, 2011.
  10. ^ abcDahmke, Mark (June 1982). 'The Osborne 1'. BYTE. p. 348. Retrieved October 19, 2013.
  11. ^Advertisement (September 1982). 'The $1795 Business Computer that is changing the way people go to work'. BYTE. p. 31. Retrieved October 19, 2013.
  12. ^Grzanka, Leonard G. (January 1984). 'Requiem for a Pioneer'. Portable Computer.Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  13. ^Rothman, David H. (1985). The Silicon Jungle. New York: Ballantine Books. p. 33. ISBN0-345-32063-8.
  14. ^'The Portable Companion'. Retrieved August 1, 2009.
  15. ^Lee Felsenstein (February 12, 2009). 'email to PBA Galleries'.Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  16. ^ abcdefghHogan, Thom (1982). Osborne 1 Technical Manual. Mike Iannamico (2F00153-01 ed.). Osborne Computer Corporation.
  17. ^http://www.kev.pulo.com.au/osborne1/documents/o1screenpacusersguide.pdfScreen-Pac User Guide, retrieved 2017 Oct 03
  18. ^'Draw Cards Using MBASIC'. The Portable Companion. August–September 1982. ISSN0732-7501.
  19. ^Pournelle, Jerry (April 1982). 'The Osborne 1, Zeke's New Friends, and Spelling Revisited'. BYTE. p. 212. Retrieved October 19, 2013.
  20. ^Fallows, James (July 1982). 'Living With a Computer'. The Atlantic. Retrieved March 17, 2019.
  21. ^Kline, David (July 1982). 'Osborne—Behind Guerrilla Lines'. Microcomputing. pp. 42–50. Retrieved February 15, 2016.
  22. ^Ahl, David H. (December 1984). 'Top 12 computers of 1984'. Creative Computing. Retrieved March 16, 2019.

Further reading[edit]

  • Adam Osborne and John Dvorak (1984). Hypergrowth: the rise and fall of Osborne Computer Corporation. Idthekkethan Pub. Co. ISBN0-918347-00-9.

External links[edit]

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Osborne 1.

Osborne Laptops For Sale

  • Video of Osborne 1 computer on YouTube
Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Osborne_1&oldid=1001338170'

Adam Osborne is a British author, book and software publisher, one of the most charming, persuasive, egotistical, and supremely confident people in the computing field, indeed, in all industry.

Adam Osborne was born in Thailand in 1939 to British parents and spent much of his childhood in Tamil Nadu in South India, where his father, the writer Arthur Osborne, a devotee of Sri Ramana Maharshi, helped popularize ideas from Eastern religion in the West. Osborne moved to England as a teenager and received a degree in chemical engineering from Birmingham University in 1961. He later received a doctorate in chemical engineering at the University of Delaware and took a job with Shell Oil in California, but he left Shell in the early 1970s to pursue his interest in computers and technical writing.

In the mid-1970’s Osborne became a computer hobbyist and began self-publishing on computing, writing a programming manual for Intel’s first microprocessor. In 1972 he founded Osborne and Associates to create a series of easy-to-read computing manuals (long before the For Dummies… series). By 1977, Osborne Books, as the company had become, had published over 40 computing titles. In 1979, Osborne sold his publishing company to McGraw-Hill. During the same time, he began writing columns for computer magazines Interface Age and later Infoworld. He was becoming increasingly convinced that for computers to be truly useful, they needed to be mobile, as they needed to move with the people who used them and be available whenever and wherever people were. This was a concept he didn’t think the existing companies understood or were prepared to deal with.

The idea of the laptop computer (also known as a notebook computer, notebook, notepad) wasn’t a new one. It was visualized by Alan Kay at Xerox PARC in 1968 and talked of in his 1972 paper as the Dynabook. The idea was later developed in another Xerox PARC creation—NoteTaker. The laptop is a small portable computer having its primary components (processor, display, keyboard) built into a single unit capable of battery powered operation, which typically weighs from 1 to 7 kg, depending upon dimensions, materials, and other variables. As the personal computer became viable in the early 1970s, the thought of a portable personal computer arose.

In March, 1980, at the West Coast Computer Faire, Adam Osborne approached the ex-Intel engineer (and a nerd from the Homebrew Computer Club, just like Steve Leininger of TRS-80, Apple‘s Steve Jobs and Steve Wozniak) Lee Felsenstein with the idea of starting a computer company that would not only produce an affordable, portable computer, but would offer bundled software with the machine. Osborne asked Felsenstein to develop the hardware of the portable computer. Using the money from his publishing business along with venture capital Osborne found Osborne Computer Corp. in January, 1981.

Following Osborne’s specifications, Felsenstein designed a portable computer that had a case with a carrying handle, could survive being accidentally dropped and would fit under an airplane seat (see the nearby photo). The machine weighed only 24 pounds, had a 52-column display that would fit on a five-inch screen, contained a cushioning tube, and had two floppy disk drives. The computer even has an optional battery pack, so it doesn’t have to plugged into the power outlet. To meet the small screen requirements, Felsenstein stored a full screen’s worth of information in memory and gave the users keys that allowed them to scroll the memory screen across the display. In April, 1981, at the same West Coast Computer Faire, Adam Osborne introduced the Osborne 1 Personal Business Computer for initial price $1795.

The Osborne 1 (see the lower image) featured a 5 inch 52-column display, two floppy-disk drives (capacity 92K), a Z80 microprocessor (working at 4.0 MHz), 64k of RAM, a parallel port (IEEE-488), and a modem/serial port (see the Technical Manual of Osborne 1). It included a bundled software package that included the CP/M operating system, the Microsoft MBASIC programming language, the WordStar word processing package, the SuperCalc spreadsheet program and Digital Research CBASIC programming language (2000 worth of retail software alone).

Osborne 1 Personal Business Computer

Osborne 1 appears to be a huge market hit—in September, 1981, Osborne Computer Company has its first US$1 million sales month. In the first 8 months since its introduction, 11000 Osborne 1 computers ship. The peak sales per month for Osborne 1 personal computers over the course of the product lifetime was 10000 units, despite the initial business plan for the computer predicting a total of only 10000 units sold over the entire product lifecycle.

Despite early success, Osborne struggled under heavy competition. Kaypro Computer offered portables that, like the Osborne 1, ran CP/M and included a software bundle, but Kaypro offered larger 9 inch display. Apple Computer’s offerings had a large software library of their own and with aftermarket cards, could run CP/M as well. IBM’s 16-bit IBM PC was faster, more advanced, and offered a rapidly growing software library, and Compaq offered a portable computer that was almost 100% compatible with IBM’s offering. Osborne’s efforts to raise $20 million in capital to rush an IBM-compatible computer to market were unsuccessful.

Besides the severe competition, Osborne made several heavy management and business errors—difficulty meeting demand, poor quality of the production, overstocking, etc. The final blow occurred in 1983 when Adam Osborne boasted about an upcoming product months before it could be released, killing demand for the company’s existing products. It is unclear whether this boast was about the Osborne Executive, which was released in May 1983 for $2495 and featured a 7 inch display and did not sell as well as its predecessor, or, more likely, the Osborne Vixen, a smaller portable that promised to offer compatibility not only with earlier Osborne models, but also with MS-DOS, allowing it to run software designed for IBM and Compaq computers. Dealers rapidly started canceling orders for the Osborne 1

Unsold inventory piled up and in spite of dramatic price cuts—the Osborne 1 was selling for $1295 in July 1983 and $995 by August, the sales did not recover. Losses, already higher than expected, continued to mount, and Osborne declared bankruptcy in September, 1983. This marketing blunder came to be known as Osborneing and the phrase circulated in Silicon Valley for the next decade.

Osborne emerged from bankruptcy in the mid 1980s and finally released the Osborne Vixen, a compact portable running CP/M, in 1984. However, the company never regained its early prominence.

In the 1990s Adam Osborne returned to India, the land of his youth, and started up another company dealing with computer software. He died in March, 2003.