Portal (computer)


Portal R2E CCMC was a portable microcomputer designed and marketed by the studies and developments department of the French firm R2E Micral and officially appeared in September 1980 at the Sicob show in Paris. The Osborne 1 was released eight months later, in April 1981. specializing in payroll and accounting.
Several hundred examples were sold between 1980 and 1983.
Extremely rare, no museum has a Portal; two are in private collections.
The company R2E Micral is also known to have designed "the earliest commercial, non-kit computer based on a microprocessor", the Micral N, one of the last examples of which was sold for 62,000 euros to Paul G. Allen, the co-founder of Microsoft, by the auctioneer Rouillac on June 11, 2017, for Allen's Seattle museum,.

Specifications

The Portal was based on an Intel 8085 processor, 8-bit, clocked at 2 MHz.
It was equipped with 64K bytes of main RAM, a keyboard with 58 alphanumeric keys and 11 numeric keys, a 32-character screen, a floppy disk, a thermal printer, an asynchronous channel, a synchronous channel, and a 220-volt power supply. Designed for an operating temperature of 15 °C to 35 °C, it weighed 12 kg and its dimensions were 45 x 45 x 15 cm. It provided total mobility.