Epson HX‑20

The Epson HX-20 is the world’s first laptop computer. The machine is invented and patented in 1980 by Yukio Yokozawa who worked for Seiko (now Seiko Epson). It was announced in 1981 in Japan and North America (at the COMDEX in Las Vegas) and got great attention from the visitors.

Epson HX‑20

The Epson HX-20 is the world’s first laptop computer. The machine is invented and patented in 1980 by Yukio Yokozawa who worked for Seiko (now Seiko Epson). It was announced in 1981 in Japan and North America (at the COMDEX in Las Vegas) and got great attention from the visitors.

It’s the size of an A4-paper, and it works on AA-batteries which lasts up to 50 hours.
The display can display 120 x 32 pixels, making it 4 lines of 20 characters. By default, a printer and storage on microcassette was inside the machine.

The later, more successful, Tandy Model 100 used this design for their machine.

Catalog type
Portable computer
Manufacturer
Release Date
July 1982
Processor
Hitachi 6301 @ 0.675 Mhz
Memory
16kB

Museum Collection

Set up.
Collection Serial code Owner
Epson HX-20 021866 Kees Stravers

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