Domain: mobilepcmag.com
Stories and comments across the archive that link to mobilepcmag.com.
Comments · 6
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Re:How's that again?
> References, please.
Sure thing.
Apple has a history of mobile computing innovation quickly ripped off by other vendors. Its PowerBook 100 - manufactured by Sony - was the world's first notebook with a built-in trackball.
The first trackpad, the first integrated modem, the first integrated 802.11b WLAN, the first 15in widescreen LCD, and the first backlit keyboard (in the 17in PowerBook) are among Apple's other notebook firsts.
MobilePC Magazine: "Top 100 Gadgets of All Time"
22. APPLE POWERBOOK 500, 1994
The PowerBook 500 wowed the notebook market with a long string of firsts: The first touch pad; the first stereo speakers (with 16-bit sound); the first expansion bay -- and the first PC Card slot; the first "intelligent" nickel metal hydride battery, with a processor that communicated battery status to the operating system; and, last but not least, the first curvaceous case, with gratuitously swooped edges and corners instead of the boxy angles of previous notebooks. Make no mistake, this notebook set the agenda for the following 10 years of portable computer design.
MobilePC Magazine: "Top 100 Gadgets of All Time"
1. APPLE POWERBOOK 100, 1991
Never mind the Apple versus PC debate: Until Apple unveiled this 5.1-pound machine, most "portable" computers were curiosities for technophiles with superior upper-body strength. But the PowerBook 100's greatest and most lasting innovation was to move the keyboard toward the screen, leaving natural wrist rests up front, as well as providing an obvious place for a trackball. It seems like the natural layout now, but that's because the entire industry aped Apple within months. The first PowerBooks captured an astounding 40 percent of the market, but more important, they turned notebook computers into mainstream products and ushered in the era of mobile computing that we're still living in today.
I stand corrected on the first 17" screen claim, giving the Register article the benefit of the doubt.
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Re:How's that again?
> References, please.
Sure thing.
Apple has a history of mobile computing innovation quickly ripped off by other vendors. Its PowerBook 100 - manufactured by Sony - was the world's first notebook with a built-in trackball.
The first trackpad, the first integrated modem, the first integrated 802.11b WLAN, the first 15in widescreen LCD, and the first backlit keyboard (in the 17in PowerBook) are among Apple's other notebook firsts.
MobilePC Magazine: "Top 100 Gadgets of All Time"
22. APPLE POWERBOOK 500, 1994
The PowerBook 500 wowed the notebook market with a long string of firsts: The first touch pad; the first stereo speakers (with 16-bit sound); the first expansion bay -- and the first PC Card slot; the first "intelligent" nickel metal hydride battery, with a processor that communicated battery status to the operating system; and, last but not least, the first curvaceous case, with gratuitously swooped edges and corners instead of the boxy angles of previous notebooks. Make no mistake, this notebook set the agenda for the following 10 years of portable computer design.
MobilePC Magazine: "Top 100 Gadgets of All Time"
1. APPLE POWERBOOK 100, 1991
Never mind the Apple versus PC debate: Until Apple unveiled this 5.1-pound machine, most "portable" computers were curiosities for technophiles with superior upper-body strength. But the PowerBook 100's greatest and most lasting innovation was to move the keyboard toward the screen, leaving natural wrist rests up front, as well as providing an obvious place for a trackball. It seems like the natural layout now, but that's because the entire industry aped Apple within months. The first PowerBooks captured an astounding 40 percent of the market, but more important, they turned notebook computers into mainstream products and ushered in the era of mobile computing that we're still living in today.
I stand corrected on the first 17" screen claim, giving the Register article the benefit of the doubt.
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Re:OQO?You're in luck, in addition to this fine, fine feature, we have a full review of the OQO on Mobile PC as well. Cheers.
Christopher Null
Editor in Chief
Mobile PC -
Re:And as ever, Apple creates the current paradigmI mean what I wrote!
Look at this timeline and tell me who had the idea first.
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And as ever, Apple creates the current paradigm...Look here at the PowerBook 100.
I think every laptop I have ever owned is basically a very similar variant of that simple design! Way to go Apple.
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Re:Has anyone seen one of these...
I reviewed this (Windows version) earlier this year for Mobile PC... link