Zenith Minisport
The Zenith Minisport (styled as minisPORT) is a subnotebook based on an 80C88 CMOS CPU running at two software selectable speeds: 4.77 MHz or 8 MHz. It was released in 1989 by Zenith Data Systems (ZDS).
It had 1 (model ZL-1) or 2 MB (model ZL-2) of RAM, ran MS-DOS 3.3 Plus from ROM, had a 640×200 LCD display and CGA and composite monochrome outputs. The Minisport was one of the first actual subnotebooks, apart from a contemporary NEC model.
Features
Unique features:
- Internal 2-inch "LT" floppy disk drive (793 KB formatted, double-sided, double-density, 80 tracks, 245 tpi, media: Fujifilm LT-1).[1] The floppy disks typically cost $80 for 10 of them. The disks were not compatible with 2-inch "VF" video floppy diskettes.
- An external standard 3.5-inch 720 KB double-density floppy drive was available as well.
- Built-in FastLynx transfer software that could install itself on any other DOS computer over a serial cable without the need for any pre-existing software on the remote system. It relied on the user typing in a DOS mode command on the other computer, which transferred control of that computer's command line to the Zenith over the serial line. The software then copied itself across, and the user could then move files. This to some extent compensated for the fact that no other computer ever used the 2-inch floppy disks, thus rendering floppy transfers impractical.
- The ability to set aside some of its upper memory (typically the 384 KB area between 640 KB and 1 MB) as a battery-backed RAM disk; this was relatively unique in DOS-based laptops (others, like the Toshiba T1000 also supported RAM disks). The RAM disk appeared as C: in DOS and enabled the computer to run with no spinning disks, extending battery life and increasing reliability. Contents were preserved with the power off, though using a minuscule amount of current from the main battery.
- Later versions included an integral 20 MB hard disk. This was enough to run WordPerfect and associated programs, including spell-checkers and diagnostic programs.
Disadvantages
- The Minisport, like most personal computers of its day, had a battery which maintained the BIOS NVRAM. When this battery failed the computer would not boot until the user edited the configurable BIOS parameters. The Minisport NVRAM battery was replaceable.
- The 2-inch floppy disks were not popular and cost more than 5.25-inch and 3.5-inch floppy disks.
Dimensions
The Minisport is 12.5-inch wide × 9.8-inch deep × 1.29-inch tall (318 mm × 249 mm × 33 mm), (lid closed), 7.75-inch (197 mm) tall (lid open). It weighs 5.9 lb (2.7 kg) with the battery.
References
External links
- Full specification and photographs (in Spanish)
- Lots of documentation and photographs (in English)
- Newsletters on the Minisport Laptop Hacker (ZIP-file, documents in English)
- Webpage maintained by the original author of the Minisport Laptop Hacker, including how to delete the hardware password.
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