| Also known as | EPPC | 
|---|---|
| Manufacturer | Ericsson | 
| Type | computer | 
| Release date | 1985[1][2][3][4] | 
| Introductory price | US$2,995 (equivalent to $8,149 in 2022)[2] | 
| Operating system | MS-DOS 2.1[2] | 
| CPU | Intel 8088 CPU @ 4.77 MHz | 
| Memory | 256 kB of RAM (Expandable to 512 kB)[2] | 
| Storage | half height 5-1/4 inch, 360 kB Floppy disk drive | 
| Display | Orange Gas Plasma display (25 line by 80 column) | 
| Graphics | 640 x 400 pixel | 
| Input | detachable keyboard | 
| Connectivity | parallel and serial ports, expansion port, second disk drive port | 
| Power | AC Power 110-240 V (No internal batteries) | 
| Mass | 8 kilograms (18 lb) | 
The Ericsson Portable PC (EPPC) was created by Ericsson in 1985.[1] It was a small computer with a weight of 8 kg. It had an Intel 8088 processor at 4.77 MHz and 256-512 kB of RAM.[2] An optional builtin thermal printer and modem was available.[2][3]
References
- 1 2 PC Portables:Ericsson Portable PC, By Alfred Poor, PC Mag, 10 Dec 1985, Page 135 - 136
 - 1 2 3 4 5 6 Ericsson Turns New Leaf With 15-Pound Portable, By Charles Bermant, PC Mag, 14 May 1985, Page 35
 - 1 2 News:New Products:The Ericsson Portable PC, InfoWorld, 22 Apr 1985, Page 26
 - ↑ Traveling Light, By Ron Sciblia, Popular Mechanics Feb 1986, Page 96-99 & 148
 - ↑ Starring the Computer - Ericsson Portable PC, The pair use the portable PC to hack from hotel rooms and phone boxes once they suspect their apartment is no longer safe.
 
External links
- (in Swedish) Ericsson Portable PC
 - (in Swedish) Ericsson PC Page Rune's PC-Museum
 - (in Swedish) Bästa datorerna genom tiderna, plats 22 till 30
 - "Ericsson Portable PC, 360 degree model", Russian Vintage Laptop Museum (museum)
 
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