Panasonic Sr. Partner, a KayPro/IBM Luggable clone.
When I was a kid, I learned a bit of reading and spelling on that thing, with its green phosphor burned into my earliest memories. Around 7-8, I read the manual and BASICA book it came with, and ultimately learned BASIC because I wanted to make it do stuff.
It ran an Intel 8088 CPU, I believe it had 128k ram (could be 64k), dual single density 5.25" floppies, a thermal printer on top, and shipped with DOS 3.3. I plan to do a complete restoration on it - the printer portion is kaput at this point in time, but should be repairable. The machine pre-dates me by 3 years. It was in use for writing business letters for about 5 years before I started taking an interest in it's multimedia (pc speaker!) functionality. Worked as a means of entertainment for my pre-school self. I held on to all my diskettes from that era, and have run them through the Kryoflux to keep the memories alive for eternity.
As a kid, I had a tendency of taking apart anything electronic. Unfortunately, this machine was one that I did take apart - to some degree, and if my memory serves me right, I only opened it up to un-jam paper that had gotten stuck behind one of the gears of the printing mechanism. Luckily, all the parts appear to be left with the machine, so it should just be a matter of opening her up and cleaning it up inside. I doubt any of the machine needs repairing, as I recall booting it up 10 years ago or so to make sure it still worked. It wasn't used for more than a year or so, and despite the fact that it was a "luggable", it was sat on a desk for its entire use.
And here I am, not only reminiscing about this old machine, but preparing to do an appropriate restoration on it.