Imagineering was sold to First Pacific in 1990 at which time Jodee Rich left the business.
These machines proved very popular with home and small business users in Australia and New Zealand, because of their low entry price, the availability of telephone support and full service in case of failure.
A "Baby-AT" chassis with 10 MHz 80286 CPU, 1MB RAM, EGA or VGA graphics (using Twinhead company cards).
CPU Speed increased to 12 MHz, and 80 - 141MB hard drive options were offered.
November 1989: The MyPC, basically an Ultra XT using cut-price components and secondhand CPUs in brightly coloured chassis, was released for sale through Grace Bros and Myer stores at Christmas.