Tulip sharpens your image This is an advert from Tulip, formerly known as Compudata of the Netherlands, for its LT 286 laptop, based on Intel's CMOS 80C286 CPU plus the 80C287 maths co-processor. It was Tulip's first laptop[source: https://www.homecomputermuseum.nl/en/collectie/tulip/tulip-lt-286/]. In common with many adverts of the era, it's claiming that it has the sharpest display of any laptop. This seemed to be where most of the technical improvements were happening, as LCDs went from dim, blurry and hard-to-read with slow response times, to back-lit, crisp and quick to refresh, over the space of only a few years. It's also notable that portable computers - or lap-helds as PCW liked to call them - are finally approaching the design of what looks like a "modern" laptop. The entry-level LT 286, with 1MB RAM and a 20MB hard disk, retailed for £2,595 - about [[2595|1989]] in [[now]]. That's apparently £1,000 less than Compaq's 286 laptop.