This stylishly designed computer had a speech recognition feature along with a microphone clipped on the left side of the LCD screen.
An article published in Personal Computer World in November 1984 explained how the voice recognition system works :
"The voice system on the Portable allows you to have a vocabulary file of up to 4096 words. However, only 64 words can be held in RAM at any one time, so a fair amount of shuffling is necessary with large vocabularies.
Before the system can understand your commands, it is necessary to create a vocabulary file and train the system to understand your voice. The Portable is supplied with a program which allows this to be done.
The first thing to do is to create a vocabulary disk file. You can have as many of these as you like. The training program prompts for a name and then opens a diskfile underthat namewith a .VOC extension. Next you enter the words you want to use, along with an optional command which you want the machine to respond to. Once you have entered all the words, you can go into training mode. To do this you speak the words into the microphone and the program records the voice patterns. The more times you repeat each word the better the result.
After you have trained all the words you can go on to see how well the machine understands you."
The keyboard had no leads - it communicates with the main unit through infrared signals. But if you put an object in between the keyboard and the main unit, communication stops ! It was the same membrane keyboard as used with the Apricot F1.
There was also an optional and quite innovative trackball available, but a classic Microsoft mouse could also be used through the serial port.
The Apricot Portable shipped with the 'Activity' front-end to the operating system, an enhanced version of the one delivered with the Apricot F1. It was quite "Mac" influenced with icon-based navigation and even a built-in icon editor !
The Apricot Portable was supplied with a great deal of bundled software : SuperWriter, SuperCalc, SuperPlanner, ACT Diary, ACT Sketch and an interactive tutorial.
The built-in disk-drive located at the right-hand side of the main unit was a Sony 3.5'' disk-drive, double-sided, 720k. ACT also supplied a little external 10 MB Rodime 3.5'' hard disk called an MSD (Mass Storage Device).
The large LCD was the first full 25-line liquid crystal screen to be mounted on a portable computer. It was made in Japan by Hitachi, but ACT wasn't happy with the controller, so it designed its own (very fast) display controller chip. It's possible to adjust the contrast by holding down the CTRL and UP-ARROW or DOWN-ARROW keys together, but the angle of the display is fixed and cannot be tilted.
But the Apricot Portable can also be connected to an external monitor and with the colour option, can display 640 x 256 pixels in eight colours from a palette of 16. In addition it is also possible to display data on both displays at the same time. For example, when using Supercalc 3 you could display the spreadsheet model on the LCD at the same time as displaying graphs or pie charts on the monitor !
The Apricot Portable could only be powered by mains power, there was no battery option available at all. Quite strange for a "portable" computer...
The Apricot Portable did not meet with great success and was considered rather as a gadget, given its LCD screen and voice recognition features, but lacking real compatibility with other Apricot computers, in addition to its limited portability.
The price was cut down in 1985, and a new version with 512k RAM was sold. The 256k model was then called FP-256, and the 512k model FP-512.
Please consider donating your old computer / videogame system to Old-Computers.com or one of our partners from anywhere in the world (Europe, America, Asia, etc.).
I''m very interested in acquiring the beautiful Apricot PCs, manuals, after market books, etc., and peripherals. Means a lot to me and I will treat them all like fragile crystals of pure joy. Ping me at carlsplumer AT gmail DOT com if you want to chat about your Apricot stuff. Cheers!
Tuesday 5th February 2019
Carl Plumer (United States)
I have an old manual for the apricot portable if anyone wants it . crick@ozemail.com.au
Tuesday 21st August 2018
james (australia)
My dad worked at apricot from the early 80’s until there demise, and I’ve inherited many portable apricots also many prototypes of most models endless amounts. I’m looking to move them on to an enthusiast that will appreciate them Thanks Matt
Thursday 9th August 2018
Matt
NAME
Apricot Portable
MANUFACTURER
ACT
TYPE
Transportable
ORIGIN
United Kingdom
YEAR
1984
BUILT IN LANGUAGE
None
KEYBOARD
infrared membrane keyboard, 92 keys, 10 function keys and numeric keypad (same keyboard as the Apricot F1)
CPU
lntel 8086
SPEED
5 Mhz
RAM
256k, up to 1024k
VRAM
128k with the color option
ROM
32k
TEXT MODES
80 chars. x 25 lines (LCD screen)
GRAPHIC MODES
LCD screen : 640 x 200 External monitor : 640 x 256 (8 colors simultaneously out of a palette of 16)
COLORS
LCD display : monochrome Color option : 8 colors simultaneously out of a palette of 16