Macintosh Portable is a portable computer designed, manufactured, and sold by Apple Computer, Inc. From September 1989 to October 1991. It is the first battery-powered Macintosh, which garnered significant excitement from critics, but sales to customers were quite low.
Introduced: September 1989
Terminated: October 1991 Description
Apple’s first foray into portable computers was the Macintosh Portable. It was similar to the Macintosh SE. Using a low energy version of the Motorola 68000, it ran at 16MHz. It had 1MB of RAM that was expandable to 9MB.
The screen was a black and white active matrix display; it flipped down, covering the keyboard, when the computer was not in use. Mouse functions were handled by a trackball to the right side of the keyboard. It had a 3.5” floppy drive, an optional internal hard drive and an internal modem.
The Macintosh Portable weighed 15.8 pounds, meaning that it was not very easy to carry around. The travel battery was good for up to ten hours. The battery charged through power supply, but the computer could not run off of AC power.
HistoryMacintosh Portable Sad Mac Miller
Though it was widely liked by reviewers, the Macintosh Portable was not a commercial success. At $6,500 it was expensive and not without its problems. The clunky build and poor readability depending on the lighting were just some of drawbacks that limited sales. Firefox privacy review.
Although it was not successful, the Macintosh Portable was a major step in the newly emerging world of portable computers. If nothing else, the design problems helped to show what to avoid in the future.
PhotosSpecifications
Processor: Motorola 68000
Processor Speed: 16 MHz Coprocessor: None Cache: 0.5 KB L1 System Bus: 16 MHz Hard Drive: Optional 40 MB (Original) or 40 MB (Backlit) Media: 1.44 MB floppy Weight and Dimensions (US): 15.8 lbs., 4.05” H x 15.25” W x 14.83” D Weight and Dimensions (Metric): 7.2 kg, 10.3 cm H x 38.7 cm W x 37.7 cm D Original Mac OS: System 6.0.4 (Original) or 6.0.7 (Backlit) Maximum Mac OS: System 7.5.5 Firmware: Macintosh ROM Logicboard RAM: 1 MB Maximum RAM: 9 MB (Original) or 8 MB (Backlit) Type of RAM Slots: 1 - Portable Minimum RAM Speed: 100 ns Interleaving Support: No Graphics Card: None Graphics Memory: None Built-in Display: 9.8” diagonal active matrix reflective LCD Resolutions: 640 x 400 Display Connection: DB-15 Expansion Slots: Modem Expansion Bays:-- Hard Drive Bus: SCSI Backup Battery: 9v transistor battery Power Adapter:-- System Battery: Sealed lead-acid battery Max Watts: 5 W Ethernet: None Infrared: None Modem: Optional 2400 bps ADB: 1 Serial: 2 SCSI: 1 - DB-25 USB: None FireWire: None Audio In: None Audio Out: 1 - 3.5-mm analog output jack, 1 - Built-in speaker Timeline
After the Macintosh Portable was released in 1989, problems with readability lead the release of a Macintosh Portable with backlighting in 1991. The backlighting, however, caused the battery life to be cut in half. It was discontinued later that year.
Videos
By Techicenter Staff Fastest external hdd 2017.
Computers are like humans, they no longer are spring chickens.
Today’s subject is on the Mac, and it’s bootup process when it fails. The most ideal failure should result in a black screen, showing Susan Kare’s infamous “Sad Macintosh” icon, (known for it’s frown on it’s right hand side, an extra pixel or two), and an accommodating “Chimes of Death”, if all failure goes as planned per to the startup process on the vintage Macintoshes. All Macs made before 1998 had the Sad Mac Icon, but any Mac made after 1987 (beginning with the SE and Macintosh II) had the “Chimes” to go along. (The original Macintosh, the Fat Mac, the XL, 512Ke, and the Plus did not have such ability.)
Any modern electronic equipment is vulnerable for failures as they age. While the subject is on the “Sad Macintosh” icon appearing at startup sequence in vintage (“Classic” Macs), failures shall not be limited to Macs, but PCs and even other computers like minis, etc. A PS/2 from the early 1990s could not boot properly only because it’s capacitors are failing as well.
The recommended directions by Apple was to bring your Mac to your Authorized Service Provider. Other than that the documentation wouldn’t say too much. Because I do not have access to historical Apple technical documents (since knowledge bases of this type predates the Web) it’s unsure if capacitors, etc was common. I think it’s safe to say because it’s more of an age than anything else.
(As a sidebar: In the early 1990s, Apple also produced a small number of Macintosh service handheld devices for the use of Authorized Service Providers. In models after 1990, the SCSI port would open up after the Sad Macintosh screen, and send additional information to this device, which would then backup on some flash device, which then was downloaded onto another Mac to figure out additional problems. There was also ROM cards that a serviceman would plug in depending on the type of Macintosh, one flash card was for LC line, one for the II line and another for like the Classic.)
Most of the electronics that are failing are due to blown up capacitors, and sometimes when it blows up, it’s like taking a bottle of Coke and throwing it into the circuit board. This doesn’t mean its totaled, you may need to replace them, (by the use of a soldering iron.)
Sometimes all attempts may not work and you may need to surrender reviving your Mac.
Classic Macs, the hardware sense, the ones with the all in ones like the 128K to Color Classics are most vulnerable because of the capacitors that hold power for the monitor.This part will need some expertise as dealing with display capacitors can be lethal.
The following YouTube videos feature Macs failing the usual failures of the startup process. (and yes I have vetted to ensure that they aren’t manipulated, etc.)
REALLY UNSUAL SAD MAC FAILS
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The Macintosh Portable wants to Jam! Now these models had no “Power On Key” so the user would strike a key. But it goes right to the Sad Mac, so therefore something failed immediately.
Typically a Sad Mac should cut right in. Now I can’t tell if there’s an arm on the left of the picture trying to do an Interrupt, but it’s not normal for a screen to wipe down, stay black, then the Sad Mac to appear.
Yeah, things are peachy for this Classic II. Analog board must had been busted.
SINGLEHANDED CASES OF CHIMES OF DEATH WITH A BLACK OR GREY SCREEN
While this may or may not show the Sad Mac, but it’s not out of the realm of possibility you may run into any Vintage Macintosh that may have a grey screen and just hear the Chimes of Death and nothing coming on screen, not even the disk icons, Happy or Sad Macintoshes. This was never documented in any of the end user Macintosh guides, and any of the technical docs I own does not discuss just the singular Chimes of Death situation. Typically this is where you can rule out capacitor issues. This became a subject on the vintage boards on Apple Discussions a few years ago, starting the awareness of the vulernabilities of aging PCs.
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Here’s a better example
Another example of the Chimes without a Sad Mac
Fast or Slow and/or High or Low Pitched Chimes of Death?
Yup I’ve witnessed it!
That’s all!
Portable Mac Os
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