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HP Computer Museum
The Omnibook 425 was HP's first 486 notebook. It had the same screen and I/O ports as the Omnibook 300 . The Omnibook 425 had an additional (third) PCMCIA slot.
HP Computer Museum
The Omnibook 800 was the last of the sub-portable Omnibooks. It was also the first to come with a Pentium processor. Three CPUs were offered: 166 MHz, 133MHz, and 100 MHz.
HP Computer Museum
The Omnibook 600 was the first HP portable computer to come with a color screen. It came standard with an Intel 486 DX4 CPU running at 75 MHz, a 340 MB hard disc and 8 MB of RAM, expandable to 32 MB. Two screen configurations were available: 9.5 inch TFT (F1115A) or 8.5 inch DSTN (F1113A).
HP Computer Museum
The Omnibook 300 was the smallest computer on the market that incorporated a full-size keyboard and screen. These small computers from the mid-1990s are too recent to be within the museum's normal scope.
HP Computer Museum
In 1993, the Corvallis Division also spearheaded HP's re-entry into the laptop after a three year hiatus with the introduction of the Omnibook 300. By 1996, HP employed 10,000 employees and contractors at the Corvallis site, mostly devoted to the inkjet components business.
Now in an attempt to be mainstream (similar to the HP OmniBook laptop), HP has created the HP 320LX Palmtop running Windows CE. Unfortunately, for many users the HP 320LX is not nearly the machine the HP
HP Computer Museum
The museum of HP computers is a collection of HP computing products introduced between 1966 and 1991. The museum contains: calculators, desktop computers, computer systems, tape drives, disc drives, plotters, printers, digitizers and other hardware as well as software, documentation and promotional materials.
you access your HP palmtop phone, appointment book, and solver files in the Windows environment on your desktop. The PIM software IS on Thaddeus Computing's 1998 CD InfoBase, as well as on CompuServe's HPPC forum - in the OmniBook 500 and OmniBook 600 sections; files OB5DSK.ZIP and OB6DSK. ZIP, respectivel)J. This software
July 1986 HP QuietJet Plus—Offered both 96 and 192-dpi output at slightly faster speeds than the ThinkJet for letter-quality printing on B-size media. Priced at $799. November 1986 HP QuietJet—Offered the same features as the QuietJet Plus, but for letter-size printing. Priced at $799. Twenty Years of Innovation:
www.hpmuseum.net
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