,
Franklin's Ace computers were the only
Apple II clones with substantial sales in the US. Unlike IBM, which usually did not pursue makers of
IBM PC compatibles,
Apple Computer aggressively sued clonemakers, such as
Apple Computer, Inc. v. Franklin Computer Corp. (1983). Announced in early 1986, VTech sold the Laser 128 in the US at a suggested retail price of $479, while
Central Point Software sold it by mail for $395; by comparison, the Apple IIe sold for $945 in April 1986. Apple—already suing VTech regarding the also Apple-compatible Laser 3000—filed a lawsuit to stop distribution of the 128, but VTech obtained
United States Customs approval to export the Laser 128 to the United States in 1986, and the lawsuit reportedly had no effect on demand for the computer. Central Point—the most prominent dealer—sold the Laser 128 and accessories with full-page magazine advertisements, saying that "a computer without expansion slots is a dead-end that stays behind as technology advances". It advertised the Laser 128 in
Commodore computer magazines; the name was, Central Point president Mike Brown said, "chosen to sound like the
Commodore 128", and the company intended to appeal to those who wanted to use the large Apple software library with a computer that cost the same as the comparable Commodore. By late 1986, other mail-order firms also sold the Laser 128, and at least one peripheral maker advertised its product's compatibility with the clone. By 1988, VTech had purchased a majority share in Central Point Software and formed
Laser Computer, Inc., as a division of the company. It ended Central Point's mail order sales of the 128, only selling through dealers such as
Sears.
inCider magazine wrote that year that "Laser will never sell as many computers or have as big a distribution network as Apple, but there's no doubt that the 128 [has] won a place in the Apple market, and irritated Apple in the process". VTech subsequently released the
Laser 128EX (1987), with a 3.6 MHz CPU, and the $549
Laser 128EX/2 (mid-1988), with a 3.5-inch disk drive and
MIDI port. (A $499 version of the 128EX/2 with a 5.25-inch drive was available.) Apple soon released the
Apple IIc Plus. ==Compatibility==