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PowerBook 100
PowerBook 100
PowerBook 100
研發商Apple Computer
类型筆記型電腦
发布日期October 21, 1991[1]
單價US$2,300[2]
停產日期September 3, 1992[1]
作業系統System 6.0.8L[3]
7.0.17.5.5[1]
中央处理器摩托罗拉 68000 16 MHz[1]
記憶體2 to 8 MB[1]


The PowerBook 100 was a portable subnotebook 个人电脑 manufactured by Apple Computer and introduced on October 21, 1991, at the COMDEX computer expo in 拉斯维加斯.[4] Priced at US$2,300, the PowerBook 100 was the low-end model of the first three simultaneously released PowerBooks. Its 中央处理器 and overall speed closely resembled those of its predecessor, the Macintosh Portable. It had a 摩托罗拉 68000 16-赫兹 (MHz) processor, 2-8 百万字节s (MB) of memory, a 9-英寸(23-厘米) 單色光 backlit 液晶显示器 (LCD) with 640 × 400 像素 resolution, and the System 7.0.1 operating system. It did not have a built-in 软盘 and was noted for its unique compact design that placed a 轨迹球 pointing device in front of the keyboard for ease of use.

Apple's then-chief executive officer (CEO) 约翰·斯卡利 started the PowerBook project in 1990, allocating $1 million for marketing. Despite the small marketing budget, the new PowerBook line was a success, generating over $1 billion in revenue for Apple in its first year. 索尼 designed and manufactured the PowerBook 100 in collaboration with the Apple Industrial Design Group, Apple's internal design team. It was discontinued on September 3, 1992, and superseded by the PowerBook 145 and PowerBook Duo series. Since then, it has been praised several times for its design; PC World named the PowerBook 100 the tenth-greatest PC of all time in 2006, and US magazine Mobile PC chose the PowerBook 100 as the greatest gadget of all time in 2005.


History

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From 1990, John Sculley, then CEO of Apple, oversaw product development personally to ensure that Apple released new computers to market more quickly. His new strategy was to increase market share by lowering prices and releasing more "hit" products. This strategy contributed to the commercial success of the low-end Macintosh Classic and Macintosh LC, desktop computers released by Apple in 1990. Sculley wanted to replicate the success of these products with Apple's new PowerBook line.[5]

Sculley began the project in 1990 and wanted the PowerBook to be released within one year. The project had three managers: John Medica, who managed engineering for the new laptop; Randy Battat, who was the vice president for product marketing; and Neil Selvin, who headed the marketing effort.[5] In 1991, the two leaders in the laptop computer industry were 东芝 and 康柏電腦, both of which had introduced models weighing less than 8磅(3.63公斤).[5] Medica, Battat, and Selvin deliberately designed the PowerBook to weigh less than its competitors.[5]

Sculley allocated a $1 million marketing budget to the PowerBook product line, in contrast to the $25 million used to market the Macintosh Classic.[5] Medica, Battat, and Selvin used most of the money to produce and air a television commercial that viewers would remember. Advertising agency Chiat/Day filmed retired 洛杉矶湖人 basketball star 卡里姆·阿卜杜勒·贾巴尔 sitting uncomfortably in a small airline coach seat yet comfortably typing on his PowerBook. The ad caption read: "At least his hands are comfortable."[5]

Apple unveiled the PowerBook 100 on October 21, 1991, at the Comdex computer expo in Las Vegas, with two other models, the PowerBook 140 and PowerBook 170.[4] The advertisement and the product were both successful. Apple projected US sales of more than 200,000 PowerBooks in the first year, with peak demand in the first three months of release.[6] By January 1992, Apple had sold more than 100,000 PowerBooks, by which time they were in short supply.[7] Apple soon solved the supply problems, and the proceeds from PowerBook sales reached $1 billion in the first year after launch. Apple surpassed Toshiba and Compaq as the market leader in worldwide share of portable computer shipments.[8] The PowerBook 100, 140, and 170 contributed greatly to Apple's financial success in 1992.[9] At the end of the financial year, Apple announced its highest figures yet, $7.1 billion in revenues and an increase in global market share from 8% to 8.5%, the highest it had been in four years.[9]

However, the initial popularity of the PowerBook 100 did not last. Sales decreased, and by December 1991 the 140 and 170 models had become more popular because customers were willing to pay more for a built-in floppy disk drive and second serial port, which the PowerBook 100 lacked.[10] By August 10, 1992, Apple quietly dropped the PowerBook 100 from its price list but continued to sell existing stock through its own dealers and alternative discount consumer-oriented stores such as Price Club. In these stores, a 4MB RAM/40MB hard drive configuration with a floppy drive sold for less than $1,000 (more than $1,500 less than the similar 2MB/20MB configuration's original list price).[10]

On September 17, 1992, Apple recalled 60,000 PowerBook 100s because of a potential safety problem.[11] An electrical short, it was discovered, could melt a small hole in the casing, which occurred in three of the 60,000 notebooks manufactured between October and March 1991.[11] On the day of the recall, Apple shares closed at $47, down $1.25, but some analysts discounted the recall's importance.[11] In addition, the original power supplies had problems with insulation cracks that could cause a short in a fuse on the 主板; and the computer was prone to cracks in the power adapter socket on the motherboard, which required a $400 replacement motherboard if the warranty had expired.[12]


Features

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Most of the PowerBook 100's internal components were based on its predecessor, the Macintosh Portable. It included a Motorola 68HC000 16 MHz processor, had 2 MB memory, no 软盘, and cost approximately $2,300.[2] An external floppy disk drive was available for $279.[4] The dimensions of the PowerBook 100 were an improvement over the Portable. It was 8.5英寸(22厘米) deep, 11英寸(28厘米) wide, and 1.8英寸(4.6厘米) high,[1] compared to the Portable, which was 14.83英寸(37.7厘米) deep, 15.25英寸(38.7厘米) wide and 4.05英寸(10.3厘米) high.[13] Another significant difference was the less expensive passive matrix display used instead of the sharper active matrix used on the Portable (and the 170).[2][14] The PowerBook 100 included the System 7.0.1 操作系统 as standard, with support for all versions up to System 7.5.5. Apple, however, released System 6.0.8L, which allowed the PowerBook 100 to run 系統6.[3] It could also be used with some earlier System 6 versions, although Apple did not officially support this.[15]

The PowerBook 100 had one external serial port, designed for use with a printer or any compatible EIA-422 device. It was the first Macintosh to omit an external 调制解调器 port,[16] instead offering an optional built-in 2400 baud modem for communications. As a result, for the first time a user could not print directly and access AppleTalk or a faster external modem simultaneously,[17][18][19] and devices such as advanced MIDI interfaces could not be used because they required the dedicated use of both ports.[20] A third-party serial modem port could, however, be installed in the internal modem slot for consumers who needed traditional functions.[21]

When the computer was not in use, contents of the memory were preserved as long as the main lead-acid battery remained charged.[14] The PowerBook 100 Power Manager was an 集成电路, usually placed on the 主板 of a PowerBook,[22] and was responsible for the power management of the computer.[22] Identical to that of the Macintosh Portable,[14] it controlled the display's 背光, hard drive spin-down, sleep and wake, battery charging, trackball control, and I/O (I/O).[22] The 100 did add a new feature: 3.5 V batteries backed up permanent and expansion 随机存取存储器 (RAM) when the PowerBook 100's battery was being replaced or when the 100 was otherwise temporarily removed from all power sources.[14][23] This made it a perfect candidate for use with Apple's RAM disk to help increase battery life by accessing the hard disk less frequently, since the 100 was the only PowerBook that maintained the contents of RAM on shutdown in order to reduce startup time.[24]

The PowerBook 100 was the first PowerBook to incorporate SCSI Disk Mode, which allowed it to be used as an external hard disk on a desktop Macintosh. This provided a convenient method for software to be installed onto the PowerBook or transferred to the desktop, without the need for the 100's optional floppy disk drive. A specialized SCSI cable with a unique connector was required, however, to use any SCSI device on the PowerBook series. A second dedicated cable was required for SCSI Disk Mode.[14] This feature was unique to the 100 until Apple introduced new PowerBooks more than a year later.[25]

There are two versions of the PowerBook 100's QWERTY鍵盤 layout keyboard: a domestic US version with 63 keys and an international ISO version with 64 keys.[14] The 大寫鎖定 key on the PowerBook 100 did not have a locking position or a lighted indicator of its status, and to compensate, the System 7 operating system software includes an extension file that causes an icon of the international caps lock symbol to appear in the upper right-hand corner of the menu bar[14] when Caps Lock is active.


Design

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Both the PowerBook 140 and 170 were designed before the 100 by the Apple Industrial Design Group, from March 1990-February 1991.[26] The 100's styling was based on those computers and represents the first improvements to the PowerBook line as Apple benefited from the lessons learned in developing the more powerful models' enclosure. The 100 was designed between September and December 1990, and retained the same design elements, which were a variation on the Snow White design language Apple had been using since 1984. Specifically, 2 mm(0.079英寸) raised ridges spaced 10 mm(0.39英寸) apart intended to tie it into the existing product line.[26]

Apple approached Sony in late 1989 because it did not have enough engineers to handle the number of new products that were planned for delivery in 1991.[27] Using a basic 藍圖 from Apple, including a list of chips and other components, and the Portable's architecture, the 100 was miniaturized and manufactured by 索尼 in 聖地牙哥 (加利福尼亞州), and 日本.[28][29] Sony engineers had little experience building personal computers but nonetheless completed Apple's smallest and lightest machine in under 13 months,[27] cancelling other projects and giving the PowerBook 100 top priority. Sony president 大賀典雄 gave project manager Kihey Yamamoto permission to recruit engineers from any Sony division.[27]

Robert Brunner, Apple's head of industrial design at the time, led the design team that developed the laptop, including its trackball and granite color.[30] Brunner said he designed the PowerBook "so it would be as easy to use and carry as a regular book".[30] The dark granite grey color set it apart from other notebook computers of the time and also from Apple's other products, which traditionally were 米色 or platinum grey.[30] The trackball, another new design element, was placed in the middle of the computer, allowing the PowerBook to be easily operated by both left- and right-handed users. The designers were trying to create a 時裝 with the overall design of the laptop, which they felt made it a more personal accessory, like a wallet or briefcase.[30] Brunner said: "It says something about the identity of the person who is carrying it".[30]


Reception

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Crystal Waters of Home Office Computing praised the PowerBook 100's "unique, effective design" but was disappointed because the internal modem did not receive faxes, and the 100 had no monitor port.[31] The low-capacity 20 MB hard drive was also criticized. Once a user's core applications had been installed, little room was left for optional programs and documents.[31] Waters concluded: "Having used the 100 constantly in the past few weeks, I know I wouldn't feel cheated by buying it - if only it had a 40MB hard-disk drive option."[31]

PC Week benchmarked the PowerBook 100, measuring it against its predecessor, the Macintosh Portable. The PowerBook 100 took 5.3 seconds to open a Microsoft Word document and 2.5 seconds to save it.[32] The Portable took 5.4 and 2.6 seconds respectively.[32] PC Week tested the battery life, which delivered 3 hours 47 minutes of use.[32] Byte magazine's review concluded, "The PowerBook 100 is recommended for word processing and communications tasks; the higher-end products offer enough power for complex reports, large spreadsheets and professional graphics."[33] MacWEEK described it as "ideal for writers and others on a tight budget."[34]

The PowerBook 100 continues to receive recognition from the press. PC World named the PowerBook 100 the 10th-greatest PC of all time in 2006,[35] and in 2005, US magazine Mobile PC chose the PowerBook 100 as the greatest gadget of all time, ahead of the Walkman and Atari 2600.[36] The PowerBook 100 received multiple awards for its design, including the 1999 IDSA Silver Design of the Decade Award, Form magazine's 1993 Designer's Design Awards, the 1992 ISDA Gold Industrial Design Excellence Award, the 1992 Appliance Manufacturer Excellence in Design award, and the Industry Forum Design 10 Best - Hannover Fair award.[37]


Specifications

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Component Specification[1]
Display 9-英寸(23-厘米) 單色光 passive matrix (FSTN)[14] LCD (backlit) display, 640 × 400 pixel resolution
Storage 20–40 MB 小型计算机系统接口 硬盘 internal; external 3.5" floppy disk drive (optional)
Processor 16-赫兹 摩托罗拉 68000
Bus speed 16 赫兹
随机存取存储器 MB, expandable to 8 MB using 100 ns SIMMs and optional custom RAM-slot expansion card
唯讀記憶體 256 KB
Networking AppleTalk, optional 调制解调器
Battery 2½–3¾ hour sealed 铅酸蓄电池 rechargeable battery[32]
3.5-伏特 lithium backup batteries[14]
Physical 維度 8.5 in D × 11 in W × 1.8 in H (22 × 28 × 4.6 cm)
5.1磅(2.31公斤)
Port connections 1 × ADB (keyboard, mouse)
1 × mini-DIN-8 EIA-422 串行端口 (printer/modem, AppleTalk)
1 × HDI-20 (ext. floppy drive)
1 × HDI-30 connector 小型计算机系统接口 (ext. hard drive, scanner)
1 × 3.5 mm headphone jack socket
操作系统 System 6.0.8L, 7.0.17.5.5
Expansion slots 1 × serial 调制解调器
Audio 8-bit mono 22 kHz
Gestalt ID 24
代号 Elwood, Jake, O'Shanter & Bess, Asahi, Classic, Derringer, Rosebud,[38] and Sapporo[26]

Template:Timeline of portable Macintoshes


See also

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References

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  1. ^ 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 1.6 Joannidi, Christine, Macintosh PowerBook 100: Technical Specifications, 蘋果公司, 2002-03-14 [2008-05-09] 
  2. ^ 2.0 2.1 2.2 LePage, Rick, PowerBooks: price-competitive and technologically brilliant, MacWEEK: 54, October 22, 1991 
  3. ^ 3.0 3.1 System 6.0.8L: ReadMe File (8/95), Apple, Inc., August 17, 1995 [2008-05-03] 
  4. ^ 4.0 4.1 4.2 New Macs headline in Vegas, MacWEEK: 2, October 22, 1990 
  5. ^ 5.0 5.1 5.2 5.3 5.4 5.5 Carlton, Jim, Apple: The Inside Story of Intrigue, Egomania, and Business Blunders, 兰登书屋: 181–190, 1997, ISBN 0-8129-2851-2 
  6. ^ Gore, Andrew, Fall product line on track, but PowerBooks could be scarce, MacWEEK: 2, September 24, 1991 
  7. ^ Pollack, Andrew, Apple's Net Is Up 10.3% In Quarter, 纽约时报, January 17, 1992 [2008-05-10] 
  8. ^ Carlton, p. 191
  9. ^ 9.0 9.1 Macworld 10 (1), January 1993, 10 (1)  缺少或|title=为空 (帮助)
  10. ^ 10.0 10.1 Said, Carolyn, PowerBook 100 slips off U.S. price list. (Apple's Macintosh PowerBook 100 notebook computer), Macworld, August 17, 1992 [2008-06-04] 
  11. ^ 11.0 11.1 11.2 Fisher, Lawrence M., 60,000 Notebook Computers Are Being Recalled by Apple, The New York Times, September 17, 1992 [2008-05-10] 
  12. ^ Aker, Sharon, The Macintosh Bible 7th Edition, Peachpit Press: 835, 1998, ISBN 0-201-87483-0 
  13. ^ Joannidi, Christine, Macintosh Portable: Technical Specifications, Apple, Inc., 2002-03-14 [2008-05-11] 
  14. ^ 14.0 14.1 14.2 14.3 14.4 14.5 14.6 14.7 14.8 Macintosh PowerBook 100 Developer Note (PDF), Apple, Inc. (Developer Technical Publications), 1991 [2008-05-10] 
  15. ^ PowerBook & Macintosh Classic II: No Support for System 6, Apple, Inc., November 30, 1994 [2008-05-03] 
  16. ^ AppleSpec pre November 1997, Apple, Inc., 2008 [2008-05-17] 
  17. ^ PowerBook: Internal Modem & Serial Printer Configuration, Apple, Inc., November 21, 1997 [2008-05-17] 
  18. ^ PowerBook: Using MacLink Plus With Only One Serial Port (3/95), Apple, Inc., March 31, 1995 [2008-05-17] 
  19. ^ PowerBook: Miscellaneous Frequently Asked Questions, Apple, Inc., November 22, 2002 [2008-05-17] 
  20. ^ Martin Russ, APPLE NOTES: Acronyms and MIDI, Sound On Sound, Ltd., Cambridge, April 1994 [2008-05-17] 
  21. ^ PB Serial Adapter Provides Full Featured Modem Port for Apple PowerBook 150 and PowerBook 100, Sigma Seven Systems Ltd., January 1999 [2008-05-13] 
  22. ^ 22.0 22.1 22.2 PowerBook 100 through PowerBook 5300: Resetting Power Management Unit (PMU), Apple, Inc., 2004-05-26 [2008-05-11] 
  23. ^ PowerBook 100: Backup Battery Life, Apple, Inc., May 16, 1994 [2008-05-17] 
  24. ^ PowerBook 100: Creating and Using a RAM Disk(7/93), Apple, Inc., July 7, 1994 [2008-05-17] 
  25. ^ PowerBook: Using SCSI Devices, Apple, Inc., September 17, 2007 [2008-05-13] 
  26. ^ 26.0 26.1 26.2 Kunkel, Paul, Appledesign: The publisher of the Apple Industrial Design Group, Graphis Inc., New York: 30, May 1997, ISBN 1-888001-25-9 
  27. ^ 27.0 27.1 27.2 Schlender, Brenton R., Apple's Japanese ally. (Sony Corp. designs Apple's PowerBook 100), Fortune: 151, November 4, 1991 
  28. ^ Rebello, Kathy, Apple gets a little more help from its friends. (possible alliance with Sony), 彭博商业周刊: 132, October 28, 1991 
  29. ^ Ely, Ed, Apple's PowerBook: is it late, or perfectly timed?, The Business Journal Serving Greater Sacramento: 19, November 25, 1991 
  30. ^ 30.0 30.1 30.2 30.3 30.4 Lefton, Terry, Bob Brunner. (marketing successes) (The Marketers of the Year), Brandweek: 28, November 16, 1992 
  31. ^ 31.0 31.1 31.2 Waters, Crystal, Pack a traveling Mac: PowerBook 100 - Hardware Review, BNET, February 1992 [2008-05-11] 
  32. ^ 32.0 32.1 32.2 32.3 Bethoney, Herb, Lightweight PowerBooks live up to their name, PC Week: 12, October 21, 1991 
  33. ^ Thompson, Tom, Apple reinvents the notebook. (Hardware Review) (Apple Macintosh PowerBook 100, 140, 170), Byte: 253, March 1992 
  34. ^ Ford, Ric, Talkin' about a Mac revolution: PowerBooks represent a big change for Mac computing, opening new doors as the first truly mobile Macs, MacWEEK: 3, January 6, 1992 
  35. ^ The 25 Greatest PCs of All Time, PC World, August 11, 2006 [2008-08-09] 
  36. ^ Apple laptop is 'greatest gadget', BBC News, February 22, 2005 [2008-05-11] 
  37. ^ Complete Award Listing (1986–2008), Lunar Design, [2008-05-11] 
  38. ^ Linzmayer, Owen W, Apple Confidential (1st Edition), No Starch Press: 30, 1999, ISBN 1-886411-31-X 


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