Macintosh Portable

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jump to: navigation, search
Macintosh Portable
Macintosh Portable-IMG 7541.jpg
Manufacturer Apple Inc.
Type Portable computer
Release date September 20, 1989; 26 years ago (1989-09-20)
Introductory price US$7,300 (with hard drive)
Discontinued October 1989 (1989-10)
Operating system System 6.0.4
CPU 16 MHz 68000 CPU
Memory 1 MB SRAM(expandable to 9 MB), 256 KB ROM
Storage 1.4 MB double-sided floppy drive, 40 MB 3.5″ Connor hard drive
Display 9.8″ black and white active matrix LCD screen
Graphics 640 x 400 pixel, 1-bit
Input keyboard, trackball
Power 5W, 13 amps, lead-acid batteries, AC Charger
Dimensions 4.05″ x 15.25″ x 14.83″
Weight 16 pounds (7.2 kilograms)
Predecessor Macintosh Plus
(Macintosh SE)
Successor PowerBook 100
PowerBook 140/170

The Macintosh Portable was Apple Inc.'s first battery-powered portable Macintosh personal computer. Released on September 20, 1989, it was received with excitement from most critics but consumer sales were quite low. It featured a fast, sharp, and expensive black and white active matrix LCD screen in a hinged design that covered the keyboard when the machine was not in use. The Portable was one of the early consumer laptops to employ an active matrix panel, and only the most expensive of the initial PowerBook line, the PowerBook 170, used one, due to the high cost. The cursor pointing function was handled by a built-in trackball that could be removed and located on either side of the keyboard. It used expensive SRAM in an effort to maximize battery life and to provide an "instant on" low power sleep mode. The machine was designed to be high-performance, at the cost of price and weight.

Criticism[edit]

Unlike later portable computers from Apple and other manufacturers, the battery is charged in series with the supply of power to the computer. If the battery can no longer hold a charge, then the computer cannot run on AC power and hence it will not boot. The main reason for this is that the original power supply had a very low output. This is also why in many instances the special low-power hard drive would not spin up. Several popular unauthorized workarounds were devised, including to use the power supply from the PowerBook 100 Series which provides a higher output. As with automotive batteries, the sealed lead acid cells used in the Portable failed if they are fully discharged. The batteries are no longer manufactured and it is very rare to find an original battery that will hold charge and allow the computer to start. It is possible to repack the battery with new cells, or use alternative 6 V batteries.[1] There were three lead-acid cells inside the battery; each were manufactured by Gates Energy Products (now EnerSys) and they were also used in Quantum 1 battery packs for photographic flash use.

Despite the dramatic improvement in terms of ergonomics offered by the responsiveness, sharpness, and uniformity of its active matrix panel, one of the drawbacks of the Portable was poor readability in low light situations. Consequently, in February 1991, Apple introduced a backlit Macintosh Portable (model M5126). Along with the new screen, Apple changed the SRAM memory to less expensive and more power-hungry pseudo-SRAM (which reduced the total RAM expansion to 8 MB) and lowered the price. The backlight feature was a welcomed improvement, but unfortunately it reduced the battery life by about half. An upgrade kit was also offered for the earlier model as well, which plugged into the ROM expansion slot. The Portable was discontinued in October of the same year.

In addition, at 16 pounds (7.2 kilograms) and 4 inches (10 centimetres) thick, the Portable was a heavy and bulky portable computer. The main contributor to the weight and bulk of the Portable was the lead-acid batteries. [2]

Drive configurations[edit]

There were three drive configurations available for the Macintosh Portable: one floppy drive, two floppy drives or a hard drive and a floppy drive. The floppy drive in the Macintosh Portable is 1.44 MB.

Most Macintosh Portable units came with a hard drive. It was a custom-engineered Conner CP-3045 (known by Apple as "Hard Disk 40SC"). It holds 40 MB of data, consumes less power compared to most hard drives at the time and it had a proprietary SCSI connector; adapters that allow standard SCSI drives to be used on the Portable exist, but they are expensive.

Legacy[edit]

The Macintosh Portable and PowerBook 100 can run Macintosh System 6.0.4 through to System 7.5.5.

In May 2006, PC World rated the Macintosh Portable as the seventeenth worst tech product of all time.[2] By contrast, MacUser magazine noted that this machine tended to remain relevant and therefore tended to have a long usage lifespan for those who bought it, reducing its total cost of ownership.

See also[edit]

  • Outbound laptop, a Mac-compatible laptop available at the same time as the Portable. It was significantly smaller, less expensive, and lighter but offered a much less responsive "twist" LCD and a less ergonomic pointing device. It was also restricted to 4 MB of RAM, due to its requirement that users install a ROM chip from an Apple machine such as the Macintosh Plus.

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Alternate Battery for Mac Portable". Low End Mac. Retrieved January 8, 2013.
  2. ^ a b PCWorld (May 26, 2005). "The 25 Worst Tech Products of All Time". Retrieved July 18, 2006. 

External links[edit]

Preceded by
Macintosh Plus
(Macintosh SE)
Macintosh Portable
October 21, 1991
Succeeded by
PowerBook 100
PowerBook 140/170