SRT, owned by the
ITT Corporation during the 1960s, specialised in Air Traffic Control systems and military radar systems. In 1971,
SRT provided the core technology for
Stansaab AS, a joint venture with Saab and the state-owned Swedish Development Company. The company's primary focus was systems for real-time data applied to commercial and aviation applications. To this was added the data terminal operations of
Facit in 1972. The Alfaskop terminals quickly gained a foothold in the market for airline reservations with 1,000 in use at
Scandinavian Airlines alone. In 1978, Stansaab was merged with the Data Saab division of Saab to form
Datasaab. In 1981,
Ericsson, believing that growth in telecoms would be lower than that in
IT, purchased Datasaab and integrated it with two of its own divisions to form Ericsson Information Systems (EIS). Accurately predicting convergence between telephony and data technologies, EIS instructed the Alfaskop group to begin working on a design for Ericsson's first PC – the EPC, which was released 16 months later in 1984. Following market difficulties in the United States, particularly with a disappointing launch of its PC, Ericsson decided to abandon its "
paperless office" strategy. In 1988, the division was sold to Nokia and later to ICL in 1990. The final act was its sale by ICL to
Wyse Technology who eventually wound down manufacturing. ==The Alfaskop range==