My first portable computer was a Bondwell that was basically a big improvement to the Osborne at a much cheaper price.
Really had fun on this. There were a few instant compilers available for cp/m - I had Borland Pascal and a C compiler from another company that were really amazing. These are very slow computers, but these compilers would compile and run instantly. At university, I had to do computer programming on computer card decks, and pick up the results the next morning. To be able to compile and run genuine C instantly on a home computer was mind-blowing.
The Bondwell came out in 1984 - so why would anyone be using a CP/M computer in 1984?
I was using PC compatibles at work (NEC computers as their monitors killed anything IBM produced), but the original PC price in Australia was incredible. When the IBM pcs were available with the 10MByte hard drive (yes Mb , not GBytes), you could easily spend $10,000 at Computerland. This was about the same price as a new Mazda 323 car at the time.
The Bondwell CP/M portable was, from memory, sub $1000 and there was a lot of readily available and cheap software. My CP/M C compiler was $49 which was a bargain as any professional C Compiler usually started at hundreds of dollars into the thousands.
The first PC I brought was shared with my brother in about 1986/7. It was a $2000 pc clone (a 80286 I think) but at the time the RAM prices were through the roof. To get the 4MByte expansion memory card (which you did need) cost us $4000 extra.
Before the Bondwell, we did have a Australian designed Microbee (about $400 I think), but it used an audio input/output to a cassette tape for storage and needed a monitor or tv (not cheap then). A nice build but the moment I got the Bondwell, I never touched the Microbee again.