RAIR: The box is not always black This advert from RAIR shows the company's credentials as an OEM supplier, with the its original "Black Box" - shown on the bottom - also showing up as the Innsite micro, Ryman business computer, and most famously as ICL's Personal Computer. None of these machines were PCs in the IBM sense, but were more like desktop minicomputers, with their support for multiple users. RAIR - as well as the licencing deal for the internals of the Black Box, as used in the ICL Personal Computer, was also helping ICL out in developing its product range. Perhaps this included ICL's upcoming range of DRS (Distributed Resource System) modular computers, but there were also rumours that ICL was working on something to take on Apple's Lisa. This was something of an easy target as the Lisa was retailing for a truly-staggering £8,500 (about [[8500|1983]] in [[now]] money), so even behemoth and supplier-to-governments ICL reckoned it could undercut it by £2,000[source: "ICL to launch against Lisa?", Personal Computer News, September 15 1983, p. 6]. For a while, some commentators in the press, in particular Guy Kewney of PCW, seemed to hold out hope that RAIR might have become Britain's leading micro company, until founder[source: http://investing.businessweek.com/research/stocks/private/person.asp?personId=523395&privcapId=523381&previousCapId=523381&previousTitle=Pervasic%20Ltd.] Mark Potts took his company more in to the multi-user business instead. Despite RAIR choosing to follow that particular path, Prudential Assurance still put £1 million of equity in to the company - said by PCN to be "one of the UK's best-established micro makers" - in August of 1983, with money coming from the Merchant Navy Officers' Pension Fund. At the time, pension funds were regularly raided to raise investment capital, with Prudential having previously used the National Coal Board's pension fund to buy in to Dragon[source: "Newsprint", Personal Computer World, October 1983, p. 131]. As well as the injection of capital from the Pru, RAIR was building up its dealer network and spinning off its terminal business as RTS Technology. RTS was to take on the competition from companies such as Hazeltine - whose products RAIR had previously been supplying back in 1979 - TI, Centronics, Qume and IBM. The MD of the new company - Bob Mountain - said "RTS intends eventually to sell complete systems, not necessarily built by RAIR"[source: "RAIR BASIC", PCN, September 22nd 1983, p. 5]. [extra: rair_1987-01.jpg|RAIR's Nick Flowerdew (left) welcomes back the RAIR-sponsored Mk. 2 Astra at Dover. © PCW January 1987]RAIR was still around in 1987, where Personal Computer World referred to its sponsoring of a car in the annual Beaujolais Run from Villefrance to Dover, where RAIR's marketing director Nick Flowerdew was on hand to welcome the drivers back as they crossed the finishing line. The event - which bought back immature and often undrinkable first bottles from that year's vintage to be sold to yuppies in fashionable wine bars at over-the-odds prices - was, needless to say, all the rage in the 1980s. PCW grumbled that although they appreciated RAIR sending them a photo of the event, they were upset that their "bottle of plonk" must have gone missing in the post[source: "Chip Chat", Personal Computer World, January 1987, p. 280].