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TIME: Almanac 1990
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1990 Time Magazine Compact Almanac, The (1991)(Time).iso
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103089
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10308900.020
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1990-09-18
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BUSINESS, Page 73Big Power, Tiny Package
Even in this dreary phase, the computer industry has a few
bright lights. The most dependable star right now is Houston-based
Compaq, which makes IBM-compatible desktop and portable machines.
Started less than eight years ago, Compaq is expected to reach
sales of $3 billion in 1989. Last week the company did it again.
Compaq introduced its eagerly awaited LTE, a laptop machine that
packs all the power of a desktop computer into a package small
enough to fit into a briefcase. The notebook-size machine has a
standard keyboard and an easy-to-read backlit screen. Most
important, the 6-lb. machine is the only one of its size that
accepts standard 3.5-in. diskettes, which will enable users to
transfer files from laptop to desktop in a snap. "This one is easy
to sell. It is the Mercedes of computers," said Jim Johnston, a
salesman at Atlanta's PC Mart.
The newcomer is priced accordingly. With 20 megabytes of memory
on its hard-disk drive, a basic version of the LTE retails for
$2,999. A more powerful model offers 40 megabytes of hard-disk
memory for $4,999. Even at those prices, the LTE will be a
formidable competitor, according to industry analysts. Boasts
Compaq spokesman John Sweney: "It's a full-function PC. It gets
everything into that same size without any of the compromises that
other manufacturers had to make." Compaq is aiming at a hot new
market: laptop sales are expected to grow from 834,000 units this
year to 2 million annually by 1993.