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Revision as of 16:04, 26 April 2008 by DavidPaulHamilton (talk | contribs) (Undid revision 208339852 by TimTomTom (talk))(diff) ← Previous revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)Bondwell is the name of a manufacturer of home computers.
Originally Bondwell sold a line of Z80, CP/M-80 based Osborne-like luggables such as the models Bondwell-12, Bondwell-14 (1984) and Bondwell-16 (1985). An exceptional feature in these was an inbuilt speech synthesizer. Their prices were exceptionally affordable for the time, although significant trade-offs were made in regard durability, for instance the chassis was rather flimsy plastic, falling far short of the ruggedness usually expected of luggables. The fanless power supply unit, located under the motherboard, often caused trouble. The choice of peripheral I/O devices made the use of interrupts virtually impossible.
The Bondwell-12 was a portable desktop computer with an built-in 12 inch (30 cm) monochrome CRT display, equipped with 64 KB(KB = 1024 bytes) of internal memory, CP/M 2.2 and two single-sided, double density, 5.25 inch floppy disk drives (180 KB). The Bondwell-14 had 128 KB of memory, CP/M 3.0 and two double-sided drives (360 KB). The Bondwell-16 had CP/M 3.0, one double-sided drive and a hard disk drive with a capacity of 10 MB.
The Bondwell-2 (1985) was a laptop computer with 64 KB of memory, CP/M 2.2 and one single-sided, double density 3.5 inch floppy disk (360 KB). 256 and 512 KB memory extensions were available.
The Bondwell-8 was a laptop computer 512 KB of RAM and an Intel 80C88 running at a speed of 4.77 MHz. It featured a 80x25 characters/640x200 graphics monochrome screen with blue backlight. It also had a built-in 720 KB 3.5 inch floppy disk drive.
The more advanced Bondwell-18 model featured MS-DOS and the x86 architecture.
They also produced a range of 286-based laptop computers such as the B310 Plus.
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