Among the EO customers AT&T claimed were: The New York Stock Exchange, Andersen Consulting, Lawrence Livermore Laboratories, FD Titus & Sons and Woolworths.
EO, Inc., 52 percent owned by AT&T, shut down operations on July 29, 1994 after failing to secure the funding to continue.
Both were powered by the AT&T 92K Hobbit chip, created by AT&T specifically for PDAs. They also contained a host of I/O ports - modem, parallel, serial, VGA out and SCSI. Perhaps the most interesting part was the OS - PenPoint OS from Go Corporation. Widely praised for its simplicity and ease of use, the OS never gained widespread use.Hardware specifics
Two models, the Communicator 440 and 880 were produced and measured about the size of a clipboard.