Motorola Envoy

The Motorola Envoy Personal Wireless Communicator was a personal digital assistant initially slated for released by Motorola in summer 1994[1] but delayed and then available for public sale in February, 1995.[2] It was built to run General Magic's Magic CAP operating system, and it combined wireless, telephone, and infrared modems in a single PDA package. Andy Rubin led development of the Motorola Envoy[3].

Motorola reused the name for multiple products.[4] It is also a UHF tone and vibrate paging receiver produced in the mid-1980s that responded to two-tone sequential encoding, including GE type 99, Quick Call II & 1+1, REACH* and 5-Tone Sequential.

References

  1. "Motorola's Envoy First to Run Magic Cap." Byte.com fetched 21 July 2008 Archived 8 November 2008 at the Wayback Machine
  2. "Envoy PDA for the Masses". Communications Week. 27 February 1995.
  3. "Andy Rubin Unleashed Android on the World. Now Watch Him Do the Same With AI". Wired. ISSN 1059-1028. Retrieved 2021-02-05.
  4. "THE PDA MAY NOT BE DOA AFTER ALL". Businessweek. 1994-06-13. Retrieved 2010-02-22.
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