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HP 200LX

The HP 200LX Palmtop PC (F1060A, F1061A, F1216A), also known as project Felix, is a personal digital assistant introduced by Hewlett-Packard in August 1994.[1][2] It was often called a Palmtop PC, and it was notable that it was, with some minor exceptions, a MS-DOS-compatible computer in a palmtop format, complete with a monochrome graphic display, QWERTY keyboard, serial port, and PCMCIA expansion slot.

Hewlett-Packard 200LX
Case open
ManufacturerHewlett-Packard
TypePalmtop PC
Release dateAugust 1994; 28 years ago (August 1994)
DiscontinuedDecember 1999
Operating systemHewlett-Packard MS-DOS 5.0
CPU80186-compatible "Hornet" @ 7.91 MHz
Memory1/2/4 MB RAM
Removable storageSRAM, ATA Flash, Compact Flash. Up to 2 GB using third-party driver.
GraphicsCGA 640×200 (2 colors)
Power2× AA-size removable batteries, 1× CR2032 coin cell backup, optional AC adapter
Dimensions16 × 8.64 × 2.54 cm (6.3" × 3.4" × 1")
Case closed

Description

 
Size comparison with 2007 Apple iPhone

Input is accomplished via a small QWERTY-keyboard with a numeric keypad, enclosed in a clamshell-style case, less than about 25% of the size of a standard notebook computer. The palmtop runs for about 30–40 hours on two size AA alkaline or Ni-Cd rechargeable cells and can charge batteries (both Ni-Cd and NiMH) via a 12 V DC wall adapter.

The HP 200LX has an Intel 80186 compatible embedded central processing unit named "Hornet", which runs at ~7.91 megahertz (which can be upgraded or overclocked to up to 15.8 MHz) and 1, 2 or 4 MB of memory, of which 640 KB is RAM and the rest can be used for expanded memory (EMS) or memory-based storage space. After-market updates can bring the memory chips to up to 64 MB, which frees the PCMCIA slot for modem or ethernet card use. The Silicom, Accton 2212/2216, Netgear FA411, and Sohoware ND5120 network cards were compatible. Being IBM PC/XT compatible and running MS-DOS 5.0 from ROM, the HP 200LX can run virtually any program that would run on a full-size PC compatible computer as long as the code is written for the Intel 8086, 8088 or 80186 CPU and can run using CGA graphics. It can also run programs written for the 80286 CPU, provided they do not require the use of protected mode. It has a 16-bit PCMCIA Type II expansion slot that supports 5 V at 150 mA maximum, a SIR compatible infrared port and a full serial port (but with a proprietary mini connector for space constraint reasons).

The built-in software suite runs from ROM and includes the Lotus 1-2-3 Release 2.4 spreadsheet,[3][4][5] a calendar, a phone book, a terminal, Lotus cc:Mail and a capable scientific/business calculator (among other applications). With a large compactflash storage card and a serial mouse, even Microsoft Windows 3.0 can be run on the palmtop. Running Windows was limited by the hardware, and the maximum version that could be run was Windows 3.0 in Real Mode. However, Word 1.x and Excel 2.x for Windows would run (since they could run in Real Mode), allowing for the authoring of MS Office format-compatible files. The 640×200 resolution CGA compatible 4-shade gray-scale LCD screen has no back light. An electroluminescent technology back light installation is available from a third party since 2004, but keen eyesight is still required to use the small palmtop effectively without resorting to using its 2× and 4× zoom modes.

While true CGA displays do not allow for redefinable fonts in text mode and support a hardware code page 437, the HP 95LX supports code page 850 instead.[6] Starting with the HP 100LX the LX series even supports user-switchable text mode ROM fonts for both code page 437 and 850 as well as software-definable RAM fonts (for codepages 437G, 437T, 852, 866 via KEYBEZ).[7] Lotus 1-2-3 internally uses the Lotus International Character Set (LICS), but characters are translated to code page 850 for display and printing purposes.

Model variants

HP 100LX

The HP 100LX Palmtop PC (F1020A for the 1 MB, F1022A for the 2 MB model),[8] also known as project Cougar, is the direct predecessor of the 200LX. It was released in 1993 and available in International English, U.S. English, French, German and Spanish variants with localized keyboard and messages.[8] It is almost the same, including the Hornet CPU and MS-DOS 5.0, but with earlier built-in application versions.

HP Palmtop FX

The HP Palmtop FX is a variant of the HP 100LX with up to 2 MB flashable memory in 1993.[9] FAT flash disk images could be created and written to drive F: by a special FLASHDSK.EXE utility.[10] According to one source, it was developed for a Korean insurance company.[11]

HP 200LX AIA

The HP 200LX AIA was a 2 MB double-speed variant of the HP 200LX manufactured for the insurance company American International Assurance (AIA).[12]

HP 1000CX

The HP 1000CX Palmtop PC (F1203A for the 1 MB in March 1995, F1222A for the 2 MB model in February 1997), also known as project Puma, is an economy version of the 200LX with its Hornet CPU but without any built-in software except the MS-DOS 5.0 operating system in ROM. It was in widespread use among, for example, Coca-Cola warehouse managers, who loaded their own logistics software onto the machine. It has a black clamshell, while the 200LX has a dark green casing.

HP OmniGo 700LX

The HP OmniGo 700LX Communicator Plus (F1206A), codenamed "Columbia", was a project of the HP calculator branch in Singapore. The HP OmniGo 700LX is essentially a 2 MB HP 200LX including its Hornet CPU redesigned to piggyback a Nokia 2110 GSM mobile telephone for wireless mobility. The HP 200LX motherboard was factory-modified to support a second PCMCIA slot for a Nokia Data Card. Owing to the relatively large size of the Nokia telephone, the HP OmniGo 700LX has a large, pebble-shaped casing, making it a handheld with a phone attached. It was announced in late 1995 as part of plans for a collaboration between HP and Nokia.[13] Shipment starting in March 1996.[13] The production of the HP OmniGo 700LX ceased after the Nokia 2110 mobile telephone was rendered obsolete by later telephones. The device can be seen as a forerunner to the first smartphone, Nokia's Communicator 9000.

Related models

HP 95LX

The HP 95LX Palmtop PC (F1000A for the 512 KB, F1010A for the 1 MB model) introduced the basic design in April 1991. It was known internally as project Jaguar. It had a NEC V20 CPU (an enhanced Intel 8088 clone with Intel 80186 instruction set compatibility and an additional Intel 8080 emulation mode, running at 5.37 MHz), but was hampered in running PC applications because of its quarter-CGA resolution LCD screen and MDA compatible (instead of CGA) graphics chip. The HP 95LX for the most part only displayed graphics in a special LX graphics mode. It ran MS-DOS 3.22 and had Lotus 1-2-3 Release 2.2 built in.[14][15] It also included a CR2032 battery for memory backup when the AA mains ran out.

HP OmniGo 100

 
HP OmniGo 100

The HP OmniGo 100 Organizer Plus (F1305A/F1310A) was designed as a more sophisticated successor to the LX series, and incorporated the HP-12C calculator functionality. It was GUI based, controlled by pen input or keyboard. However, it lacked the versatility of running unmodified DOS programs. The normal operation mode was with DOS-based PEN/GEOS 2.1 and Graffiti handwriting recognition running on Datalight ROM-DOS 6.22. It was not widely accepted as a calculator replacement, and Palm and Pocket PCs became acceptable as PDAs. Equipped with 1 MB of RAM, it was based on the Vadem VG230/V5H,[16] a highly integrated system controller with 16 MHz NEC V30HL CPU, instruction set compatible with the Intel 80186.

Current usage

Although this product line was discontinued by HP in order to introduce their Windows CE product line (starting with the HP 300LX), a strong interest in this hardware continued. It was the last palmtop from HP which ran the MS-DOS operating system, for which there is much software from desktop PCs, and it came with a useful bundle of software including 1-2-3 and Quicken. Compared to machines with Windows-based operating systems such as CE, DOS programs are more compact and efficient and, with programs such as Software Carousel, many applications programs could be loaded at once.

Third-party upgrades, repairs and renovations are available to maintain and extend the device.[17][18][19]

Because of its small size, the HP 200LX was very popular in Japan, so much so that its demise prompted an open-source initiative led by a group named Morphy One [ja] to design and market an AMD Élan SC400-based replacement to fill its place in 2001.[20] However, only one prototype was ever built[21] before the company responsible for the project filed for bankruptcy in 2003. Some argue it was a scam as hundreds of people lost deposits they placed on the new palmtop in advance. The project leaders argued that key electronic components were unavailable due to strong demand from the mobile phone manufacturing industry.[22]

Common problems

  • A common problem with the HP 200LX case is related to the injected-molded case top. The right hinge to case blend had poor flow in the process, resulting in the formation of a crack which propagates across the hinge under stress, causing failure. This can be reinforced and repaired using super glue, among other methods (industrial super glue advised). One can also use a small thin rectangular piece of metal and epoxy it to the upper right hand corner of the clam shell where the crack occurs. This offers additional support to the area and prevents and/or repairs this problem.
  • Another weakness of the design is the failure of the case opening latch. This problem can easily be repaired by placing a thin slice cut from rubber eraser, left over silicone kit, or 'super sponge' within the latch as a "spring".
  • Only high quality AA rechargeable batteries should be used in the HP 200LX, as battery leaks can destroy the LCD's flat video cable.
  • Aging models may lose pixel columns from the display. This is caused by detachment of one or more pins of one of the SMD (Surface Mounted Device) chips in the display itself. In many cases this may be repaired by reflowing (resoldering) of the pins on the offending chip, either with an SMD reflow tool, or a soldering iron with a very fine (0.2 mm) tip.
  • Under heavy use, the space bar and enter bar can become detached. This requires keyboard replacement.
  • Under heavy use from opening and closing, the long flex strip connector between the screen and the motherboard can become torn as it tends to rub against internal components in the housing. Typically, the only way to fix this once torn is to replace the flex strip.
  • Fixing unresponsive keyboard keys. Inside the HP 200LX, the keyboard connects to the main board via a "ribbon" that has graphite pads which make physical contact to gold pads plated onto the main board. Unresponsive keys occur when this connection grows weak. This can be fixed by applying conductive silver paint (such as from a circuitwriter pen) to each graphite pad on the "ribbon". One can also use copper tape cut out to small circles. This tape adheres nicely to the graphite pad and actually gives a more definitive long lasting connection than silver paint, although both work fine. This is delicate work, and putting the HP 200LX back together after disassembly may be problematic for those who have little experience with electronics repair. However, the conductive silver paint will fully fix the problem if applied with care. An alternate cause can be corrosion of the motherboard pads to which the graphite pad connects. This can be solved by polishing the pads with fine steel wool.

Exceptions to 100% IBM PC compatibility

Other notes

  • The HP 200LX was used on board the NASA Discovery OV103 Mission STS-95 (the last mission of Senator John Glenn) in an Electronic Nose (E-Nose) experiment (the device was developed jointly by Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) and the California Institute of Technology (Caltech)). The experiment, as managed by Dr. Dan Karmon of JPL, was successful.
  • The HP 200LX can play video, and sound files using software from Stefan Peichl in relatively low quality. It is also capable of sound recording, though this is, again, in relatively low quality. There is no known compatible PCMCIA sound card for the HP 200LX. However, a Yamaha MU10 MIDI sound generator (a.o.) works through the serial port using Voyetra or GSPlay MIDI programs, and Terrence Vergauwen uses a PCMCIA parallel port card plus an OPL3LPT (Adlib compatible sounds card thru parallel port) for gaming.
  • Software and hardware is available which will allow the HP 200LX to surf the Internet.
  • The serial numbers printed on the HP machines 100LX, 200LX, 1000CX and OmniGo 700LX have the following meaning:
XXYWWNNNNN
XX = the country of manufacturing (e.g., SG = Singapore etc)
Y = the year of manufacturing; last digit (e.g., 6 = 1996)
WW = the week of the year of manufacturing
NNNNN = the number of the specific unit manufactured in specified week

Easter eggs

There are many easter eggs built into the HP 200LX. The known ones are listed as follows:

Hidden gallery

This easter egg is on the HP 200LX in the built in game, "Lair of Squid". During the startup screen of the game, if the user types the word "gallery" ("gallerie" on a French palmtop; "siegergalerie" on a German palmtop; "galeria" on a Spanish palmtop) they are placed in a "part" of the maze that contains photographs of the primary software developers that worked on the HP 200LX. The user may exit from this gallery by exiting through the door at the end of the corridor. The software developers in the photographs are listed starting from left to right, then left to right and so on as follows:

  • Andy Gryc
  • Pat Megowan
  • Everett Kaser
  • Bill Johnson
  • Lynn Winter
  • Susan Wechsler
  • Eric Evett

The last panel on the right of the corridor contains a thank you message:

Very special thanks to all the people in HP and all the companies that made this palm-top possible. The Felix S/W team

The photographs of the developers have been described as "a-maze-ing".[citation needed]

Self-test poem 1

This easter egg is in the HP 200LX self test mode. With the palmtop powered off, the user may press [ESC][ON] to start the self test mode, then cursor down to the display option. On pressing [ENTER] 14 times, to step through the various screens, the user comes to a screen of example text in the form of a limerick poem. The poem is as follows:

There once was this thing from HP

That fit in your pocket, you see.
A caveman would stare
And pull out his hair

And wonder, 'What could this thing be?'

Self-test poem 2

This easter egg is in the HP 200LX self test mode. With the palmtop powered off, the user may press [ESC][ON] to start the self test mode, then cursor down to the display option. On pressing [CTRL][ENTER], then holding down [ALT] while pressing [ENTER] 13 times, the user comes to a cryptic poem, relating to business issues faced by the software development team. The poem is as follows:

Felis Concolor

A funny thing happened on the way to the Forum
When I encountered a group in search of a quorum.
They came from a city, The Burg On The Wire.
If I tried to describe it you'd call me a liar.
They wanted to charge me a really quite large fee
For the dubious pleasure of sharing their treasure.
"I'm a very Good man (Mark my words if you can),"
"But, the Dickens, I say, I simply won't pay!"
And with poetry, then, I proceeded to bore 'em

Then proceeded myself on my way to the Forum.

Self-test poem 3

This easter egg is in the HP 200LX self test mode. With the palmtop powered off, the user may press [ESC][ON] to start the self test mode, then cursor down to the display option. On pressing [CTRL][ENTER], then holding down [SHIFT] while pressing [ENTER] 13 times, the user comes to an allegorical poem, about the history and future of the HP LX palmtops. The poem is as follows (note that the project names for the HP 95LX, the HP 100LX and the HP 200LX are 'Jaguar', 'Cougar' and 'Felix' respectively, and that 'Felix' was the first LX to include Quicken):

Nine lives has a Cat, and each Cat a name,

All of them different, none are the same.
Jaguar was first, it made quite a roar.
Cougar was next, oh, how it did soar.
Felix is third, my heart it does quicken,

Who knows what comes next, the clock is a tickin'.

Hidden development aid in 'More Applications'

This easter egg is in the built in System Manager of the HP 200LX. This 'easter egg' is probably more of a development tool than an easter egg, but, in any case, the user may display the function by first pressing the blue [&...] key to start 'More Applications'. The user may then hold down [ALT] while pressing [F9] 4 times, followed by [F10] once. As long as the [ALT] key is held down, the user will observe columns of data about System Manager compliant (.EXM) programs registered with the System Manager, along with other arcane program information.

Hidden hex calculator

The HP 200LX includes an undocumented calculator application named HEXCALC, written by Andrew Gryc. It provides arithmetical and logical operations in binary, octal, decimal and hexadecimal system. The utility can be added to the applications menu by an entry with the following fields:

  • Name: He&x Calc
  • Path: D:\BIN\HEXCALC.EXM

See also

References

  1. ^ Barr, Christopher (1994-11-08). "HP 200LX Quickens Your Expense Account". PC Magazine. Vol. 13, no. 19. p. 56.
  2. ^ Hall, Rich (1994). "NEWS: HP's New 200LX Palmtop PC Replaces the 100LX and Features Intuit's Pocket Quicken". The HP Palmtop Paper. Thaddeus Computing. from the original on 2017-04-30. Retrieved 2017-04-30.
  3. ^ Lee, Yvonne (1993-05-03). "HP 100LX rolled out as successor to palmtop". InfoWorld. Vol. 15, no. 18. p. 27. Retrieved 2016-11-26.
  4. ^ Marshall, Patrick (1993-08-23). "Hewlett-Packard makes a good thing better by packing 100LX with features". InfoWorld. Vol. 15, no. 34. p. 96. Retrieved 2016-11-26.
  5. ^ "Questions and Answers about HP Palmtops: Q. What software is built into the 200LX ROM?". The HP Palmtop Paper Online. from the original on 2016-11-27. Retrieved 2016-11-26.
  6. ^ HP 95LX User's Guide (PDF) (2 ed.). Corvallis, OR, USA: Hewlett-Packard Company, Corvallis Division. June 1991 [March 1991]. pp. E-1–E-3, F-1–F-7. F0001-90003. (PDF) from the original on 2016-11-28. Retrieved 2016-11-27. The HP 95LX character set is equivalent to code page 850, the IBM PC multilingual character set. (Note that your HP 95LX contains MS-DOS 3.22, which does not support code-page switching.) All the HP 95LX applications use this set except 1-2-3, which uses LICS, the Lotus International Character Set. Most LICS characters are included in code page 850; the few that are not will not display […] If your HP 95LX cannot display […] or if your printer cannot print a LICS character, the HP 95LX uses a fallback presentation for that character […] if you use the © symbol and your printer cannot print it, the HP 95LX might display (c) or c as the fallback presentation (depending on the capabilities of your printer).
  7. ^ HP 200LX User's Guide (PDF) (1 ed.). Singapore: Hewlett-Packard Singapore (Private) Limited, Asia-Pacific Personal Computer Division. October 1996. pp. 21-6–21-7, 25-9–25-13, 26-14–26-18, C-1–C-4, D-1–D-10. 1216-90001. (PDF) from the original on 2016-11-30. Retrieved 2016-11-29. Your palmtop supports code pages 850 and 437. The built-in applications (except 1-2-3) and System Manager-compliant applications […] use code page 850. 1-2-3 uses LICS, the Lotus International Character Set. Most LICS characters are included in code page 850; the few that are not included will not display on the palmtop. […] Any DOS application you load and run will by default use code page 437. If an application requires code page 850, you can select it using the Setup utility.
  8. ^ a b Hall, Rich (1993). "HP NEWS--HP News: New 2MB HP 100LX; Upgrade Path Available". The HP Palmtop Paper Online. Thaddeus Computing. Retrieved 2015-08-29.
  9. ^ Schmuhl, Edward H.; Sherman, Allan P.; Waisnor, Jon D. (June 1996). "HP PalmVue: A New Healthcare Information Product" (PDF). Hewlett-Packard Journal. 47 (3): 64-69.
  10. ^ "200LX 어플 자료실" (in Korean). 2008-11-17. from the original on 2012-12-31.
  11. ^ "The Other Models". The Museum of HP Calculators. from the original on 2016-12-31.
  12. ^ Auw, Jimmy (2012-06-19). "Restoring Vintage Gear: HP Palmtop 200LX". Jimmy's Junkyard.
  13. ^ a b Hall, Rich. "HP's OmniGo 700LX Communicator Plus". HP Palmtop Paper Online.
  14. ^ Marshall, Patrick (1991-12-16). Siobhan Nash; Sebastian Rupley (eds.). "Computing in the palm of you hand". InfoWorld. Vol. 13, no. 50. pp. 69–81. Retrieved 2016-11-26.
  15. ^ Matzkin, Jonathan (July 1991). "Hewlett-Packard Co. HP 95LX Palmtop PC". PC Magazine. Vol. 10, no. 13. pp. 216, 220, 222. Retrieved 2016-11-26.
  16. ^ Goldstein, Hal. "User to User: The HP OmniGo 100". HP Palmtop Paper Online.
  17. ^ Hermocom.com helps with self-repair advice 2008-09-07 at the Wayback Machine
  18. ^ Thaddeus Computing offers professional repair service in USA.
  19. ^ Michel Bel can help with repairs in the Netherlands.
  20. ^ Tamiya, Maya (2000-05-04). "Beyond free software in Japan". LWN.net. Retrieved 2021-05-16.
  21. ^ (in Japanese). Mynavi News. 2001-05-07. Archived from the original on 2016-03-05. Retrieved 2013-10-11.
  22. ^ "モルフィーワン計画が中止の危機? 渦中の開発者に聞く (Morphy One cancelled? Developers speak out)". ASCII.jp (in Japanese). 2002-06-28. Retrieved 2013-10-11.
  23. ^ . Archived from the original on 2006-08-28. Retrieved 2005-03-12.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)

Further reading

  • by Rob Tillotson.

External links

  • 200LX Software S.U.P.E.R. software mirror, over 1500 programs and 200 databases for the 200LX
  • HP 200LX Old-Computers.com Museum
  • HP Palmtop Paper Online (Thaddeus Computing; Buy-Sell-Repair)
  • Articles concerning the NASA STS-95 E-Nose experiment
  • "Off-the-Shelf" 200LX used by "Shade Tree Engineer"
  • The Electronic Nose and The Quadrupole Mass Spectrometer Array:
  • Results From The Space Shuttle STS-95 Electronic Nose Experiment
  • HP Palmtop Ring Homepage
  • Page d'un utilisateur HP 200LX (français) installation DOS/Windows, captures d'écran.
  • web page of a HP 200LX user (english) DOS/Windows installation, screen captures.
  • Compatibility of the Sohoware ND5120 network card.

200lx, palmtop, f1060a, f1061a, f1216a, also, known, project, felix, personal, digital, assistant, introduced, hewlett, packard, august, 1994, often, called, palmtop, notable, that, with, some, minor, exceptions, compatible, computer, palmtop, format, complete. The HP 200LX Palmtop PC F1060A F1061A F1216A also known as project Felix is a personal digital assistant introduced by Hewlett Packard in August 1994 1 2 It was often called a Palmtop PC and it was notable that it was with some minor exceptions a MS DOS compatible computer in a palmtop format complete with a monochrome graphic display QWERTY keyboard serial port and PCMCIA expansion slot Hewlett Packard 200LXCase openManufacturerHewlett PackardTypePalmtop PCRelease dateAugust 1994 28 years ago August 1994 DiscontinuedDecember 1999Operating systemHewlett Packard MS DOS 5 0CPU80186 compatible Hornet 7 91 MHzMemory1 2 4 MB RAMRemovable storageSRAM ATA Flash Compact Flash Up to 2 GB using third party driver GraphicsCGA 640 200 2 colors Power2 AA size removable batteries 1 CR2032 coin cell backup optional AC adapterDimensions16 8 64 2 54 cm 6 3 3 4 1 Case closed Contents 1 Description 2 Model variants 2 1 HP 100LX 2 2 HP Palmtop FX 2 3 HP 200LX AIA 2 4 HP 1000CX 2 5 HP OmniGo 700LX 3 Related models 3 1 HP 95LX 3 2 HP OmniGo 100 4 Current usage 5 Common problems 6 Exceptions to 100 IBM PC compatibility 7 Other notes 8 Easter eggs 8 1 Hidden gallery 8 2 Self test poem 1 8 3 Self test poem 2 8 4 Self test poem 3 8 5 Hidden development aid in More Applications 8 6 Hidden hex calculator 9 See also 10 References 11 Further reading 12 External linksDescription Edit Size comparison with 2007 Apple iPhone Input is accomplished via a small QWERTY keyboard with a numeric keypad enclosed in a clamshell style case less than about 25 of the size of a standard notebook computer The palmtop runs for about 30 40 hours on two size AA alkaline or Ni Cd rechargeable cells and can charge batteries both Ni Cd and NiMH via a 12 V DC wall adapter The HP 200LX has an Intel 80186 compatible embedded central processing unit named Hornet which runs at 7 91 megahertz which can be upgraded or overclocked to up to 15 8 MHz and 1 2 or 4 MB of memory of which 640 KB is RAM and the rest can be used for expanded memory EMS or memory based storage space After market updates can bring the memory chips to up to 64 MB which frees the PCMCIA slot for modem or ethernet card use The Silicom Accton 2212 2216 Netgear FA411 and Sohoware ND5120 network cards were compatible Being IBM PC XT compatible and running MS DOS 5 0 from ROM the HP 200LX can run virtually any program that would run on a full size PC compatible computer as long as the code is written for the Intel 8086 8088 or 80186 CPU and can run using CGA graphics It can also run programs written for the 80286 CPU provided they do not require the use of protected mode It has a 16 bit PCMCIA Type II expansion slot that supports 5 V at 150 mA maximum a SIR compatible infrared port and a full serial port but with a proprietary mini connector for space constraint reasons The built in software suite runs from ROM and includes the Lotus 1 2 3 Release 2 4 spreadsheet 3 4 5 a calendar a phone book a terminal Lotus cc Mail and a capable scientific business calculator among other applications With a large compactflash storage card and a serial mouse even Microsoft Windows 3 0 can be run on the palmtop Running Windows was limited by the hardware and the maximum version that could be run was Windows 3 0 in Real Mode However Word 1 x and Excel 2 x for Windows would run since they could run in Real Mode allowing for the authoring of MS Office format compatible files The 640 200 resolution CGA compatible 4 shade gray scale LCD screen has no back light An electroluminescent technology back light installation is available from a third party since 2004 but keen eyesight is still required to use the small palmtop effectively without resorting to using its 2 and 4 zoom modes While true CGA displays do not allow for redefinable fonts in text mode and support a hardware code page 437 the HP 95LX supports code page 850 instead 6 Starting with the HP 100LX the LX series even supports user switchable text mode ROM fonts for both code page 437 and 850 as well as software definable RAM fonts for codepages 437G 437T 852 866 via KEYBEZ 7 Lotus 1 2 3 internally uses the Lotus International Character Set LICS but characters are translated to code page 850 for display and printing purposes Model variants EditHP 100LX Edit The HP 100LX Palmtop PC F1020A for the 1 MB F1022A for the 2 MB model 8 also known as project Cougar is the direct predecessor of the 200LX It was released in 1993 and available in International English U S English French German and Spanish variants with localized keyboard and messages 8 It is almost the same including the Hornet CPU and MS DOS 5 0 but with earlier built in application versions HP Palmtop FX Edit The HP Palmtop FX is a variant of the HP 100LX with up to 2 MB flashable memory in 1993 9 FAT flash disk images could be created and written to drive F by a special FLASHDSK EXE utility 10 According to one source it was developed for a Korean insurance company 11 HP 200LX AIA Edit The HP 200LX AIA was a 2 MB double speed variant of the HP 200LX manufactured for the insurance company American International Assurance AIA 12 HP 1000CX Edit The HP 1000CX Palmtop PC F1203A for the 1 MB in March 1995 F1222A for the 2 MB model in February 1997 also known as project Puma is an economy version of the 200LX with its Hornet CPU but without any built in software except the MS DOS 5 0 operating system in ROM It was in widespread use among for example Coca Cola warehouse managers who loaded their own logistics software onto the machine It has a black clamshell while the 200LX has a dark green casing HP OmniGo 700LX Edit The HP OmniGo 700LX Communicator Plus F1206A codenamed Columbia was a project of the HP calculator branch in Singapore The HP OmniGo 700LX is essentially a 2 MB HP 200LX including its Hornet CPU redesigned to piggyback a Nokia 2110 GSM mobile telephone for wireless mobility The HP 200LX motherboard was factory modified to support a second PCMCIA slot for a Nokia Data Card Owing to the relatively large size of the Nokia telephone the HP OmniGo 700LX has a large pebble shaped casing making it a handheld with a phone attached It was announced in late 1995 as part of plans for a collaboration between HP and Nokia 13 Shipment starting in March 1996 13 The production of the HP OmniGo 700LX ceased after the Nokia 2110 mobile telephone was rendered obsolete by later telephones The device can be seen as a forerunner to the first smartphone Nokia s Communicator 9000 Related models EditHP 95LX Edit Main article HP 95LX The HP 95LX Palmtop PC F1000A for the 512 KB F1010A for the 1 MB model introduced the basic design in April 1991 It was known internally as project Jaguar It had a NEC V20 CPU an enhanced Intel 8088 clone with Intel 80186 instruction set compatibility and an additional Intel 8080 emulation mode running at 5 37 MHz but was hampered in running PC applications because of its quarter CGA resolution LCD screen and MDA compatible instead of CGA graphics chip The HP 95LX for the most part only displayed graphics in a special LX graphics mode It ran MS DOS 3 22 and had Lotus 1 2 3 Release 2 2 built in 14 15 It also included a CR2032 battery for memory backup when the AA mains ran out HP OmniGo 100 Edit HP OmniGo 100 The HP OmniGo 100 Organizer Plus F1305A F1310A was designed as a more sophisticated successor to the LX series and incorporated the HP 12C calculator functionality It was GUI based controlled by pen input or keyboard However it lacked the versatility of running unmodified DOS programs The normal operation mode was with DOS based PEN GEOS 2 1 and Graffiti handwriting recognition running on Datalight ROM DOS 6 22 It was not widely accepted as a calculator replacement and Palm and Pocket PCs became acceptable as PDAs Equipped with 1 MB of RAM it was based on the Vadem VG230 V5H 16 a highly integrated system controller with 16 MHz NEC V30HL CPU instruction set compatible with the Intel 80186 Current usage EditAlthough this product line was discontinued by HP in order to introduce their Windows CE product line starting with the HP 300LX a strong interest in this hardware continued It was the last palmtop from HP which ran the MS DOS operating system for which there is much software from desktop PCs and it came with a useful bundle of software including 1 2 3 and Quicken Compared to machines with Windows based operating systems such as CE DOS programs are more compact and efficient and with programs such as Software Carousel many applications programs could be loaded at once Third party upgrades repairs and renovations are available to maintain and extend the device 17 18 19 Because of its small size the HP 200LX was very popular in Japan so much so that its demise prompted an open source initiative led by a group named Morphy One ja to design and market an AMD Elan SC400 based replacement to fill its place in 2001 20 However only one prototype was ever built 21 before the company responsible for the project filed for bankruptcy in 2003 Some argue it was a scam as hundreds of people lost deposits they placed on the new palmtop in advance The project leaders argued that key electronic components were unavailable due to strong demand from the mobile phone manufacturing industry 22 Common problems EditA common problem with the HP 200LX case is related to the injected molded case top The right hinge to case blend had poor flow in the process resulting in the formation of a crack which propagates across the hinge under stress causing failure This can be reinforced and repaired using super glue among other methods industrial super glue advised One can also use a small thin rectangular piece of metal and epoxy it to the upper right hand corner of the clam shell where the crack occurs This offers additional support to the area and prevents and or repairs this problem Another weakness of the design is the failure of the case opening latch This problem can easily be repaired by placing a thin slice cut from rubber eraser left over silicone kit or super sponge within the latch as a spring Only high quality AA rechargeable batteries should be used in the HP 200LX as battery leaks can destroy the LCD s flat video cable Aging models may lose pixel columns from the display This is caused by detachment of one or more pins of one of the SMD Surface Mounted Device chips in the display itself In many cases this may be repaired by reflowing resoldering of the pins on the offending chip either with an SMD reflow tool or a soldering iron with a very fine 0 2 mm tip Under heavy use the space bar and enter bar can become detached This requires keyboard replacement Under heavy use from opening and closing the long flex strip connector between the screen and the motherboard can become torn as it tends to rub against internal components in the housing Typically the only way to fix this once torn is to replace the flex strip Fixing unresponsive keyboard keys Inside the HP 200LX the keyboard connects to the main board via a ribbon that has graphite pads which make physical contact to gold pads plated onto the main board Unresponsive keys occur when this connection grows weak This can be fixed by applying conductive silver paint such as from a circuitwriter pen to each graphite pad on the ribbon One can also use copper tape cut out to small circles This tape adheres nicely to the graphite pad and actually gives a more definitive long lasting connection than silver paint although both work fine This is delicate work and putting the HP 200LX back together after disassembly may be problematic for those who have little experience with electronics repair However the conductive silver paint will fully fix the problem if applied with care An alternate cause can be corrosion of the motherboard pads to which the graphite pad connects This can be solved by polishing the pads with fine steel wool Exceptions to 100 IBM PC compatibility EditThe HP 100LX HP 200LX s digital to analog converter cannot play audio tones instead it monitors battery life and charging The device does not provide the BIOS service INT 13h for reading from a hard disk Drivers have been partially written for this purpose to boot MINIX 2 0 23 Other notes EditThe HP 200LX was used on board the NASA Discovery OV103 Mission STS 95 the last mission of Senator John Glenn in an Electronic Nose E Nose experiment the device was developed jointly by Jet Propulsion Laboratory JPL and the California Institute of Technology Caltech The experiment as managed by Dr Dan Karmon of JPL was successful The HP 200LX can play video and sound files using software from Stefan Peichl in relatively low quality It is also capable of sound recording though this is again in relatively low quality There is no known compatible PCMCIA sound card for the HP 200LX However a Yamaha MU10 MIDI sound generator a o works through the serial port using Voyetra or GSPlay MIDI programs and Terrence Vergauwen uses a PCMCIA parallel port card plus an OPL3LPT Adlib compatible sounds card thru parallel port for gaming Software and hardware is available which will allow the HP 200LX to surf the Internet The serial numbers printed on the HP machines 100LX 200LX 1000CX and OmniGo 700LX have the following meaning XXYWWNNNNNXX the country of manufacturing e g SG Singapore etc Y the year of manufacturing last digit e g 6 1996 WW the week of the year of manufacturing NNNNN the number of the specific unit manufactured in specified weekEaster eggs EditThere are many easter eggs built into the HP 200LX The known ones are listed as follows Hidden gallery Edit This easter egg is on the HP 200LX in the built in game Lair of Squid During the startup screen of the game if the user types the word gallery gallerie on a French palmtop siegergalerie on a German palmtop galeria on a Spanish palmtop they are placed in a part of the maze that contains photographs of the primary software developers that worked on the HP 200LX The user may exit from this gallery by exiting through the door at the end of the corridor The software developers in the photographs are listed starting from left to right then left to right and so on as follows Andy Gryc Pat Megowan Everett Kaser Bill Johnson Lynn Winter Susan Wechsler Eric EvettThe last panel on the right of the corridor contains a thank you message Very special thanks to all the people in HP and all the companies that made this palm top possible The Felix S W team The photographs of the developers have been described as a maze ing citation needed Self test poem 1 Edit This easter egg is in the HP 200LX self test mode With the palmtop powered off the user may press ESC ON to start the self test mode then cursor down to the display option On pressing ENTER 14 times to step through the various screens the user comes to a screen of example text in the form of a limerick poem The poem is as follows There once was this thing from HPThat fit in your pocket you see A caveman would stare And pull out his hairAnd wonder What could this thing be Self test poem 2 Edit This easter egg is in the HP 200LX self test mode With the palmtop powered off the user may press ESC ON to start the self test mode then cursor down to the display option On pressing CTRL ENTER then holding down ALT while pressing ENTER 13 times the user comes to a cryptic poem relating to business issues faced by the software development team The poem is as follows Felis ConcolorA funny thing happened on the way to the Forum When I encountered a group in search of a quorum They came from a city The Burg On The Wire If I tried to describe it you d call me a liar They wanted to charge me a really quite large fee For the dubious pleasure of sharing their treasure I m a very Good man Mark my words if you can But the Dickens I say I simply won t pay And with poetry then I proceeded to bore emThen proceeded myself on my way to the Forum Self test poem 3 Edit This easter egg is in the HP 200LX self test mode With the palmtop powered off the user may press ESC ON to start the self test mode then cursor down to the display option On pressing CTRL ENTER then holding down SHIFT while pressing ENTER 13 times the user comes to an allegorical poem about the history and future of the HP LX palmtops The poem is as follows note that the project names for the HP 95LX the HP 100LX and the HP 200LX are Jaguar Cougar and Felix respectively and that Felix was the first LX to include Quicken Nine lives has a Cat and each Cat a name All of them different none are the same Jaguar was first it made quite a roar Cougar was next oh how it did soar Felix is third my heart it does quicken Who knows what comes next the clock is a tickin Hidden development aid in More Applications Edit This easter egg is in the built in System Manager of the HP 200LX This easter egg is probably more of a development tool than an easter egg but in any case the user may display the function by first pressing the blue amp key to start More Applications The user may then hold down ALT while pressing F9 4 times followed by F10 once As long as the ALT key is held down the user will observe columns of data about System Manager compliant EXM programs registered with the System Manager along with other arcane program information Hidden hex calculator Edit The HP 200LX includes an undocumented calculator application named HEXCALC written by Andrew Gryc It provides arithmetical and logical operations in binary octal decimal and hexadecimal system The utility can be added to the applications menu by an entry with the following fields Name He amp x Calc Path D BIN HEXCALC EXMSee also EditHP 110 HP 110 Plus DIP Pocket PC Atari PC Folio Atari Portfolio Poqet PC Poqet PC Prime Poqet PC Plus ZEOS Pocket PC Ben NanoNote Sub notebook HP OmniBook Netbook Palmtop PC Ultra mobile PCReferences Edit Barr Christopher 1994 11 08 HP 200LX Quickens Your Expense Account PC Magazine Vol 13 no 19 p 56 Hall Rich 1994 NEWS HP s New 200LX Palmtop PC Replaces the 100LX and Features Intuit s Pocket Quicken The HP Palmtop Paper Thaddeus Computing Archived from the original on 2017 04 30 Retrieved 2017 04 30 Lee Yvonne 1993 05 03 HP 100LX rolled out as successor to palmtop InfoWorld Vol 15 no 18 p 27 Retrieved 2016 11 26 Marshall Patrick 1993 08 23 Hewlett Packard makes a good thing better by packing 100LX with features InfoWorld Vol 15 no 34 p 96 Retrieved 2016 11 26 Questions and Answers about HP Palmtops Q What software is built into the 200LX ROM The HP Palmtop Paper Online Archived from the original on 2016 11 27 Retrieved 2016 11 26 HP 95LX User s Guide PDF 2 ed Corvallis OR USA Hewlett Packard Company Corvallis Division June 1991 March 1991 pp E 1 E 3 F 1 F 7 F0001 90003 Archived PDF from the original on 2016 11 28 Retrieved 2016 11 27 The HP 95LX character set is equivalent to code page 850 the IBM PC multilingual character set Note that your HP 95LX contains MS DOS 3 22 which does not support code page switching All the HP 95LX applications use this set except 1 2 3 which uses LICS the Lotus International Character Set Most LICS characters are included in code page 850 the few that are not will not display If your HP 95LX cannot display or if your printer cannot print a LICS character the HP 95LX uses a fallback presentation for that character if you use the c symbol and your printer cannot print it the HP 95LX might display c or c as the fallback presentation depending on the capabilities of your printer HP 200LX User s Guide PDF 1 ed Singapore Hewlett Packard Singapore Private Limited Asia Pacific Personal Computer Division October 1996 pp 21 6 21 7 25 9 25 13 26 14 26 18 C 1 C 4 D 1 D 10 1216 90001 Archived PDF from the original on 2016 11 30 Retrieved 2016 11 29 Your palmtop supports code pages 850 and 437 The built in applications except 1 2 3 and System Manager compliant applications use code page 850 1 2 3 uses LICS the Lotus International Character Set Most LICS characters are included in code page 850 the few that are not included will not display on the palmtop Any DOS application you load and run will by default use code page 437 If an application requires code page 850 you can select it using the Setup utility a b Hall Rich 1993 HP NEWS HP News New 2MB HP 100LX Upgrade Path Available The HP Palmtop Paper Online Thaddeus Computing Retrieved 2015 08 29 Schmuhl Edward H Sherman Allan P Waisnor Jon D June 1996 HP PalmVue A New Healthcare Information Product PDF Hewlett Packard Journal 47 3 64 69 200LX 어플 자료실 in Korean 2008 11 17 Archived from the original on 2012 12 31 The Other Models The Museum of HP Calculators Archived from the original on 2016 12 31 Auw Jimmy 2012 06 19 Restoring Vintage Gear HP Palmtop 200LX Jimmy s Junkyard a b Hall Rich HP s OmniGo 700LX Communicator Plus HP Palmtop Paper Online Marshall Patrick 1991 12 16 Siobhan Nash Sebastian Rupley eds Computing in the palm of you hand InfoWorld Vol 13 no 50 pp 69 81 Retrieved 2016 11 26 Matzkin Jonathan July 1991 Hewlett Packard Co HP 95LX Palmtop PC PC Magazine Vol 10 no 13 pp 216 220 222 Retrieved 2016 11 26 Goldstein Hal User to User The HP OmniGo 100 HP Palmtop Paper Online Hermocom com helps with self repair advice Archived 2008 09 07 at the Wayback Machine Thaddeus Computing offers professional repair service in USA Michel Bel can help with repairs in the Netherlands Tamiya Maya 2000 05 04 Beyond free software in Japan LWN net Retrieved 2021 05 16 ユーザーが作るモバイル端末 Morphy One 量産用試作基板の実装が完了 First prototype of the Morphy One open source mobile terminal showcased in Japanese Mynavi News 2001 05 07 Archived from the original on 2016 03 05 Retrieved 2013 10 11 モルフィーワン計画が中止の危機 渦中の開発者に聞く Morphy One cancelled Developers speak out ASCII jp in Japanese 2002 06 28 Retrieved 2013 10 11 Minix for the HP200LX Archived from the original on 2006 08 28 Retrieved 2005 03 12 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link Further reading EditThe HP 200LX A Review by Rob Tillotson Sy s HP 200LX reviewExternal links Edit200LX Software S U P E R software mirror over 1500 programs and 200 databases for the 200LX HP 200LX Old Computers com Museum HP Palmtop Paper Online Thaddeus Computing Buy Sell Repair Articles concerning the NASA STS 95 E Nose experiment Off the Shelf 200LX used by Shade Tree Engineer The Electronic Nose and The Quadrupole Mass Spectrometer Array Results From The Space Shuttle STS 95 Electronic Nose Experiment HP Palmtop Ring Homepage Skolob s Hewlett Packard 95LX Palmtop Page Information and FAQ on HP 95LX Page d un utilisateur HP 200LX francais installation DOS Windows captures d ecran web page of a HP 200LX user english DOS Windows installation screen captures Compatibility of the Sohoware ND5120 network card Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title HP 200LX amp oldid 1130381632 OG700LX, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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