About: PowerBook 2400c   Sponge Permalink

An Entity of Type : owl:Thing, within Data Space : 134.155.108.49:8890 associated with source dataset(s)

The PowerBook 2400c is the closest Apple came to producing a sub-notebook. Although it was technically not a Duo, it had everything that was trademarked to the Duo: the slim, lightweight design, at a time when most Mac laptops were nearing the 8 pound mark. (The 2400c came in at only 4.4 pounds.) When Apple introduced this machine in May 1997, it was intended at first only for the Mac market in Japan (and later expanded to include only Japan and the USA. Consequently, warranty services are only valid for these two nations. Taiwan has a 2400c fan club for users of this increasingly rare laptop.

AttributesValues
rdfs:label
  • PowerBook 2400c
rdfs:comment
  • The PowerBook 2400c is the closest Apple came to producing a sub-notebook. Although it was technically not a Duo, it had everything that was trademarked to the Duo: the slim, lightweight design, at a time when most Mac laptops were nearing the 8 pound mark. (The 2400c came in at only 4.4 pounds.) When Apple introduced this machine in May 1997, it was intended at first only for the Mac market in Japan (and later expanded to include only Japan and the USA. Consequently, warranty services are only valid for these two nations. Taiwan has a 2400c fan club for users of this increasingly rare laptop.
  • The PowerBook 2400c (codenames: "Comet", "Nautilus") is a subnotebook in Apple Computer's PowerBook range of Macintosh computers, weighing . Manufacturing was contracted to IBM. In a return to the PowerBook 100 form factor, It was introduced in May 1997 as a late replacement for the PowerBook Duo 2300c, which had been the last of the subnotebook PowerBook Duo series. The 2400c was discontinued in March 1998, with no immediate replacement — the model that followed it was the much larger PowerBook G3 Series (known as "Wallstreet"/"Mainstreet"). However, in Japan a 2400c with a 240 MHz CPU (codenamed "Mighty Cat") was offered shortly after the original model's discontinuation, until the end of the year.
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dbkwik:hardware/pr...iPageUsesTemplate
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  • 25.0
CPUspeed
  • 180(xsd:integer)
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  • Successor
MSRP
  • 3500(xsd:integer)
OS
Introduced
  • 1997-05-08(xsd:date)
Name
  • Navbox with columns/doc
CPU
col2footer
  • 1997-05-08(xsd:date)
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  • Preceding Family Model
Title
  • Apple Model Navigation
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  • Current Model
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  • 60(xsd:integer)
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  • uncollapsed
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  • Replaced
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  • text-align:center;background:silver;
Discontinued
  • 1998-03-14(xsd:date)
RAM
  • 16(xsd:integer)
col3footer
  • Following Family Model
abstract
  • The PowerBook 2400c is the closest Apple came to producing a sub-notebook. Although it was technically not a Duo, it had everything that was trademarked to the Duo: the slim, lightweight design, at a time when most Mac laptops were nearing the 8 pound mark. (The 2400c came in at only 4.4 pounds.) When Apple introduced this machine in May 1997, it was intended at first only for the Mac market in Japan (and later expanded to include only Japan and the USA. Consequently, warranty services are only valid for these two nations. Lighter than a PowerBook Duo 2300c and as fast as a standard PowerBook 3400, the 2400c packs an active-matrix 800x600 pixel screen. Its full array of ports was remarkable, but it still used an external disk drive. (It had no CD-ROM drive, however.) The 2400c, however, has a very small keyboard, being originally targeted only for the Japanese Mac market. Taiwan has a 2400c fan club for users of this increasingly rare laptop.
  • The PowerBook 2400c (codenames: "Comet", "Nautilus") is a subnotebook in Apple Computer's PowerBook range of Macintosh computers, weighing . Manufacturing was contracted to IBM. In a return to the PowerBook 100 form factor, It was introduced in May 1997 as a late replacement for the PowerBook Duo 2300c, which had been the last of the subnotebook PowerBook Duo series. The 2400c was discontinued in March 1998, with no immediate replacement — the model that followed it was the much larger PowerBook G3 Series (known as "Wallstreet"/"Mainstreet"). However, in Japan a 2400c with a 240 MHz CPU (codenamed "Mighty Cat") was offered shortly after the original model's discontinuation, until the end of the year. The 2400c uses the same PowerPC 603e processor as the preceding Duo 2300c, but at a much higher CPU clock - 180 instead of 100 MHz. However, the 2400 is unable to utilize the DuoDock like the 2300c was, making the lack of an internal removable drive much more noticeable. Like the PowerBook 100 and Duo series before it, it was sold with an external floppy drive. Apple did not offer a CD-ROM drive for it which was otherwise standard for all other PowerBooks. Unlike the Duo, reinstated peripheral ports on the machine most closely matched those of the original 100 and include: ADB, one combined serial printer/modem port, HD-20 floppy port, HD-30 SCSI port, but added a VGA video out, as well as a stereo sound out and in, infrared port, and two PCMCIA card slots. The PCMCIA slots officially accept only 2 Type II or 1 Type III PCMCIA-spec cards, but some users have applied simple motherboard modifications to allow the use of Cardbus expansion cards as well, extending the practical life of this subcompact until a replacement was eventually offered by Apple. The 2400 is built around a 10.4 inch active matrix color LCD screen, making the computer very compact indeed - it is slightly smaller and lighter, though a bit thicker, than a 12 inch iBook, and the fourth smallest subnotebook behind the 12" PowerBook G4 introduced several years later. Apple's current offering in this category is the MacBook Air. Due to its processor being located on a detachable daughter card, the PowerBook 2400c saw a small number of PowerPC G3 processor cards created for it. Companies such as Interware, Vimage, and Newer Technologies offered processor upgrades which would swap out the 603e for a G3 ranging from 240 MHz to 400 MHz. These cards are often highly sought after and can bring large dollar amounts at online auctions.
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