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The Zorba GC-200 was a CP/M-80 “luggable” computer introduced in 1983 by Modular Micros brand. It was widely compatible with other machines (e.g., Kaypro, Osborne, Xerox 820) and even had an IEEE-488 interface—aimed at businesses that had to work with many kinds of systems. Those features made it a flexible “bridge” machine in mixed CP/M environments.
Commercially, however, the GC-200 arrived just as the market pivoted to IBM-PC compatibility. Kaypro and Osborne already dominated CP/M portables so the Zorba computers were sold only briefly; roughly 6,000 units were built before remaining stock was liquidated. In short, the GC-200 was not a success in sales terms, despite competent hardware.
In historical terms, the Zorba GC-200’s impact is as a marker of transition. It represents the “last of its kind” CP/M portable: thoughtfully engineered for interoperability just as the market was moving from CP/M to MS-DOS and PC-compatible portables. It illustrates how quickly user priorities shifted from cross-system CP/M compatibility to strict IBM compatibility.
The power cord is loose and it is not stored inside the computer. Our model is also missing the carry-on case holder.
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