To get the most out of your new computer, you really need to use your feet The SX-64 "portable" wasn't a new idea as there had been similar attempts at luggables in the past, for instance the Digital Group's Mini Bytemaster - although this did have a much larger screen. However, Osborne had resurrected the idea in 1982 and since then - thanks to the Osborne 1's popularity - every micro company wanted to have a portable too, and every micro company was also required to have more-or-less the same photo of someone in a suit lugging said "portable" around. And yes - there it is - a dude who who's not only hauling around a 10kg brick whilst pretending it weighs less than a bag of crisps but who looks like he's got a large dagger sticking out of his abdominal region. Portables hadn't really yet reached actual laptop proportions, and neither had this - a version of the Commodore 64 stuffed in to a case which, like the Osborne, made much of the fact that it could fit under an airline seat. However its dependency on a 240V power supply meant that it couldn't actually be used on the move, even though marketing blurb for the thing frequently showed stuff like someone standing in the middle of a building site with their SX-64 and no power points in sight. It came with a 5" screen, a built-in and legendarily-slow 5.25" 170K 1541 floppy disk drive, Centronics interface for a printer and cartridge ports and retailed for £895 - about [[895|1984]] in [[now]] money. The documentation for the SX-64 was thought to be the standard Commodore 64 manual with parts of the 1541 disk manual "mashed in". Your Commodore was somewhat scathing about it, saying: ~"As with most Commodore documentation, this is a disaster and in many places is totally inaccurate. Some work has been put into correcting errors that were contained in the original manuals but just as many new mistakes seem to have crept in"[source: "The SX64 reviewed", Your Commodore, November 1984, p. 86]. It was first shown during 1983's summer CES in Chicago and was due to go on sale in the UK by Christmas of the same year[source: "A portable feast", Commodore Horizons, December 1983, p. 7]. At about the same time, Commodore had also signed agreements with Bytec of Canada for the technology in its Hyperion portable, which gave Commodore the rights to produce its own IBM PC-compatible portable, as well as with Intel to second-source the 8088 processor to go in it. The SX-64 came with four free software packages - a neccesity since Osborne had defined the luggable market with the "One" as coming with a whole heap of free software. Although the machine also came with a joystick port and was claimed by Commodore as being suitable for home use, it didn't actually ship with a cassette interface. Despite the niggles, early demand outstripped supply forcing Commodore to keep flying them over from the US to keep stocks up[source: "SX-64 arrives", CCI, March 1984, p. 6]. CCI was clearly sceptical about the SX-64, suspecting that it had been thrown together without much in the way of any actual thought: ~"it's rather as if [Commodore] said to themselves 'Hey, what if we stick the 1541 disk drive in a box with the computer parts of the 64, then add a little monitor, copy Osborne and put a keyboard in the lid? That'll give us a nice portable without all the bother of that research and development'"