Developer | Oregon Scientific |
---|---|
Type | PDA |
Release date | 1980s |
Lifespan | 1988–? |
Media | CompactFlash |
Operating system | EPOC16 (SIBO) |
CPU | ARM 710 @ 18.432 MHz |
Display | 320 × 200 monochrome LCD |
Input | QWERTY keyboard |
Camera | N/A |
Touchpad | N/A |
Connectivity | Serial 19,200 bit/s RS-232 IrDA (infrared) |
Power | 2 × AA battery |
Dimensions | 170 mm × 90 mm × 20 mm (6.69 in × 3.54 in × 0.79 in) |
Mass | 250 g (8.8 oz) |
Related articles | Psion Series 5 |
Osaris is a personal digital assistant (PDA) featuring the EPOC operating system (OS) distributed by Oregon Scientific.
The Osaris was released in 1999, and at the time priced at equivalent to £551 in 2019 to equivalent to £702 in 2019. The Osaris contains an 18.432 MHz CL-PS7111 (ARM 710) processor and is powered by two AA size batteries or an external power 6 volt AC adapter, with a 3 volt CR2032 cell providing backup power. The liquid-crystal display (LCD) is a touchscreen, backlit 320 × 200 pixels with 16 greyscale levels. There are also 10 membrane keys, 5 on each side of the LCD. The Osaris can be linked to a PC via an RS-232 link cable and IrDA (Infrared). The Osaris contains 8 MB of read-only memory (ROM), and, depending on the model, 4 MB, 8 MB or 16 MB random-access memory (RAM). The memory can also be expanded using CompactFlash.
The Osaris is the only PDA to use the EPOC release 4 operating system. It also has the distinction of being the first device to run EPOC (later renamed Symbian OS) that was not built by Psion. It is very similar in ability to the Psion Series 5. The Osaris comes with these programs preinstalled:
Original source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Osaris.
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