Developer | Bill Moggridge[1] |
---|---|
Manufacturer | GRiD Systems Corp. |
Type | Laptop computer |
Release date | April 1982 |
Introductory price | US$8,150 (equivalent to $25,730 in 2023)[2] |
Operating system | CCOS (Compass Computer Operating System), optionally MS-DOS 2 |
CPU | Intel 8086 |
Memory | 256 KB[3] |
Storage | 384 KB magnetic bubble[3][4] |
Display | 320 × 240 |
Connectivity | 19-pin "serial", Telephone line+Audio 1,200 bit/s modem, GPIB[4] |
Successor | GridCase 2 |
The Grid Compass is a family of laptop computers introduced in 1982 by the Grid Systems Corporation. The design for the Compass was rendered by Bill Moggridge. Owing to its clamshell design—the first in a portable computer—some historians credit the original Compass as the first ever laptop.[5]
This original model of Compass lacked an internal battery compartment, requiring AC power from the wall.[5] Grid sold the succeeding model, the Compass II, in 1984 with an optional external battery unit.[6]: 91 Grid replaced the Compass with the GridCase line in 1985.[7]
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