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  • Greetings and welcome to an LGR thing! And this lovely device is the Samsung PenMaster

  • 386SL/20, a touchscreen tablet computer from 1992. Back then this started at a price of

  • $3,995, with costs heading upwards of $5,000 for a fully-specced example with additional

  • storage. But being that this was Samsung’s first tablet computer

  • on the market and one that packed an impressive 386 MS-DOS PC inside, it’s little wonder

  • that it cost half as much as a 1992 Geo Storm back then. Shout-out to Lorne by the way,

  • an LGR viewer who lent this example for me to review. These are not common machines whatsoever,

  • especially this particular model from Samsung. Ooh and he also included some Chicago popcorn,

  • what’s this? Caramel and cheese? Mm now that’s some tasty stuff. Uh but anyway yeah,

  • the PenMaster! It’s pretty large by today’s tablet standards, measuring 11½”x9½”x1.8”

  • and weighing in at five and a half pounds, or 2.5 kilograms, with the battery installed.

  • But back when it was one of the brand new pen-based computer systems debuting at the

  • 1991 Fall Comdex show, this was darned impressive. So much so that portable computing pioneer

  • Grid Systems licensed the design from Samsung and sold their own, slightly better-known

  • variant called the GridPad SL. Believe it or not Grid and Samsung weren’t the only

  • companies releasing cutting edge tablets in the early ‘90s either. The PenMaster was

  • introduced right alongside offerings from Momenta, Telepad, and Dauphin Technology.

  • If that last one sounds familiar, perhaps youve seen my previous video about the

  • Dauphin DTR-1. That was a pretty similar tablet PC in many respects, even running the same

  • base operating environment as the PenMaster, yet it didn’t hit the market until a year

  • later in 1993. On the timescale of early ‘90s computing that may as well be an eternity,

  • so let’s take a look at what Samsung was doing in these earlier days of touchscreen

  • tablet PCs. As its name implies the PenMaster comes with a pen suitable for all manner of

  • mastering, outfitted in a blue plastic body matching the wordPenin the logo. It

  • has a single button on the side for right-clicking and the pen position can even be detected

  • a centimeter away from the surface of the tablet screen. So yeah the pen is battery-powered

  • and was pretty advanced for the time, with replacements from Samsung costing 80 bucks

  • each. Naturally this is intended to work with the resistive touchscreen display here, a

  • backlit 10-inch monochrome LCD panel that displays VGA in up to 32 shades of gray. Coincidentally

  • the title of my upcoming romance novel. And along the top of the device there’s an assortment

  • of stubby sliding switches, including the power, brightness and contrast controls, a

  • tiny reset button, and LED indicators for power and hard disk activity. A majority of

  • the I/O functionality is found on the right-hand side with a spot for the 17.5 volt DC power

  • brick, a PS/2 keyboard port, 9-pin serial port, Samsung floppy drive interface, parallel

  • port, VGA video output, and a 2400 bps data/fax modem. Around the left side of the unit is

  • where you get the single PCMCIA slot for expansion cards, on top is where the rechargeable

  • 1.7 amp hour battery is installed, which originally boasted a two-hour battery life. And along

  • the bottom edge is absolutely nothing. Just a nice rounded butt. And underneath is all

  • the expected model number and FCC text, as well as four rubber feet, signaling how it’s

  • built for plopping down on a flat surface. Yeah, at five and a half pounds and a couple

  • inches thick it’s just not the type of tablet you wanna hold in your hands for very long.

  • However you choose to set it up though, the main thing to do is make sure it’s charged

  • up or plugged in so you can get it turned on.

  • [power switches on, PenMaster softly whirs to life]

  • At this point the PenMaster boots up like any PC of the time period, performs

  • the standard hardware checks, and begins loading the operating system. Go Corporation's PenPoint

  • and CIC PenDOS were both available as options from Samsung, but this one came with Microsoft

  • Windows for Pen Computing version 1.0. Based on Windows 3.1 for desktops, itll feel

  • darned familiar to anyone used to that, with the main additions being the Microsoft Pen

  • Tools applications. Things like the Pen Palette for handwriting recognition, the Trainer program

  • for helping it understand your sloppy handwriting, and the On-Screen Keyboard for when all other

  • inputs inevitably fall flat on their face. There’s also the handy Notebook application,

  • much more involved than good old Notepad. This is meant to take the place of a personal

  • organizer and rid your life of pesky paper calendars once and for all. In theory. Yeah

  • all this handwriting recognition stuff with Windows for Pen Computing never really struck

  • me as something I’d wanna use for anything more than a few minutes. Once the novelty

  • of it actually recognizing a few simple words wears off, youre left struggling with the

  • awkwardness of everything else. Even after training the software, errors are commonplace,

  • and the fact that the remainder of the Windows interface is basically unchanged from the

  • desktop PC version doesn’t do it any favors in terms of usability. At the same time though,

  • this was 1992, and the PenMaster was like a glimpse into the future. It was a portable

  • touchscreen computer with an integrated 20MHz 386SL CPU and up to 20 megs of RAM, more than

  • enough to take on most anything you’d care to throw at an early ‘90s tablet. Which

  • nowadays, I mean, is mostly gonna be Solitaire and Paintbrush, am I right? Sure it cost between

  • four and five grand when it was new, but c’mon: screwinaround with classic Windows 3 applications

  • using a touchscreen and a stylus is just a giggle-worthy spectacle. Especially since

  • it’s on hardware that was absolutely at the forefront for the time period, rarely

  • used by the average home computer user. It’s no surprise that a good number of the PenMaster

  • machines from both Samsung and Grid ended up being sold directly to professionals instead

  • of through general retail. After all, its price and functionality fit more in line with

  • the needs of government, medical, business, and education sectors, not the rando at Radio

  • Shack who just wants to play Wolfenstein 3D. Not to say you couldn’t play Wolfenstein

  • 3D on here, it’s certainly capable of doing so, but there were a thousand cheaper and

  • more suitable options for that in ‘92. And as much as I’d love to show something like

  • Wolf3D running on here, unfortunately I ran into some roadblocks preventing that. For

  • one thing, the 3.5” floppy drive it came with no longer reads diskettes at all, making

  • this rather concerning noise anytime you try.

  • [noises of floppy disk concern]

  • And to make matters worse, the hard drive barely works either at this point

  • crapping out seemingly at random. [tapping on frozen screen]

  • This not only froze the system constantly,

  • but the entire drive eventually refused to show up in the BIOS at all. And yes I’ve

  • taken everything apart, reseated all the things, and put the machine back together half a dozen

  • times. But that cranky old 63 megabyte Quantum GoDrive just wants me to get off its lawn

  • and let it rest in peace. I ended up getting a blank refurbished one that works perfectly,

  • but even after days of trying I haven’t been able to get the old drive working again

  • to make a backup, and I don’t have copies of the original software either. Ah well,

  • at least this gives us an excuse to gaze upon its delightful internals! Which really looks

  • a lot like a laptop smashed together without the keyboard and with some extra circuitry

  • for the touchscreen. Speaking of which, the PenMaster relies on a chipset by none other

  • than Wacom Company Limited, who made several pioneering pen-controlled computing products

  • and still sells digital drawing devices today. Also making a standout appearance is that

  • lovely Intel 386SL/20 CPU with an accompanying socket ready to make use of a 387 math coprocessor.

  • And up above that there’s the small but densely-populated power supply board, right

  • next to the internal PC speaker and the Tadiran TL-5186 coin cell for the CMOS and real time

  • clock. Yeah overall I’d say Samsung did a nice job fitting so much into a relatively

  • small package, considering the early ‘90s tech they were working with. The chunky battery,

  • 2.5” hard drive, and full-sized I/O ports bulk this thing up quite a bit, there was

  • a long ways to go in optimizing portable computing tech that’s for sure. And that’s about

  • it for the Samsung PenMaster: a fascinating early entry into the tablet PC marketplace,

  • though one that didn’t make much of a lasting impression it seems. That was undoubtedly

  • due in part to its limited distribution and lofty price point, but also because this was

  • Samsung’s first tablet and one that was simply early to the tablet party in general.

  • Exciting as they were in 1992, tablets wouldn’t really become a thing until the 2010s. And

  • even then when Samsung released their first Android tablet, the Galaxy Tab, I recall plenty

  • of naysayers and derisive opinions questioning who actually needed a tablet computer. Samsung

  • strikes me as one of those companies that throws every new form factor at the wall to

  • see what sticks, even if the timing isn’t exactly optimal. And the PenMaster is an enjoyable

  • example of that from all the way back in 1992. You know, I don’t really have any profound

  • point to make here, except to say that I’m continually amused by the fast-moving trends

  • in tech and how quickly consumers forget the numerous milestones along the way to where

  • we are now. Forgotten devices like the PenMaster paved the way for the future, decades in advance,

  • and for that I think things like this deserve a second look.

  • If you enjoyed this look at

  • the PenMaster, might I suggest my video on the Dauphin DTR-1. Or any number of other

  • bits of retro tech history, I cover a lot of stuff here on LGR. As always though, thank

  • you very much for watching!

Greetings and welcome to an LGR thing! And this lovely device is the Samsung PenMaster

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サムスン初のタブレット。1992年に発売された5,000ドルのPenMaster! (Samsung's First Tablet: The $5,000 PenMaster From 1992!)

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    林宜悉 に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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