Seequa Chameleon

Early portable computer From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Seequa Chameleon was an early 1980s luggable personal computer released by the Seequa Computer Corporation in 1983. It was capable of running both the MS-DOS and CP/M operating systems. It did so by having both Zilog Z80 and Intel 8088 microprocessors.[1][2][3][4][5] Chameleon approximated the hardware capabilities of the IBM PC running MS-DOS and was compatible with software such as Flight Simulator. It was not a huge success in the market.[further explanation needed][citation needed]

DeveloperRobert Mix and David Jenkins
ManufacturerSeequa Computer Corporation
Product familySeequa Chameleon series
Quick facts Developer, Manufacturer ...
Seequa Chameleon
A Seequa Chameleon running Microsoft Flight Simulator, with another Chameleon mainboard sitting on top of the chassis.
DeveloperRobert Mix and David Jenkins
ManufacturerSeequa Computer Corporation
Product familySeequa Chameleon series
TypePortable computer
ReleasedApril 1983; 43 years ago (1983-04)
Introductory priceUS$1,995 (equivalent to $6,450 in 2025)
Operating systemMS-DOS
CPUIntel 8088, 4.77 MHz & Zilog Z80
Memory128 KB (expandable to 256 KB without an expansion chassis)
StorageTwo 5.25" floppy disk drives, later being offered with a singular disk drive with an optional second drive
DisplayBuilt-in 9" green screen monitor
GraphicsUnique CGA-compatible
Weight28 lb (13 kg)
Backward
compatibility
IBM PC compatible & CP/M compatible
SuccessorSeequa Chameleon Plus
Close

Seequa Computer Corporation was based in Annapolis, Maryland.[6] It was founded by David Gardner (President) and Dave Egli (CEO), one of David's business professors at the University of Maryland. Seequa competed against the early "transportable" computers from Compaq.

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