Ellenby himself was influential beyond that one computer. Before Grid, he also worked at Xerox's groundbreaking Palo Alto Research Center. He took the Alto, the template for what would become Apple's Lisa and Mac desktops, and developed a sequel (the Alto II) that was much more commercially viable. He also founded an early tablet company, Agilis, and helped get the ball rolling on both augmented reality and navigation through another firm, GeoVector.

You could argue that some of Ellenby's creations were premature. Laptops didn't really hit the mainstream until roughly a decade later through systems like Apple's PowerBook and IBM's ThinkPad, and it would be well over two decades before his other companies' fields really swung into high gear. With that said, there's no denying that he was forward thinking and had a knack for translating ambitious ideas to devices you could buy. He'll be missed.