Outbound Laptop
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Outbound Laptop was an Apple Macintosh-compatible laptop computer. It was powered by a 15-MHz Motorola 68000 processor. Later versions increased the clock speed to 20 MHz.
Introduced in 1989, at over 4 kg the Outbound Laptop was significantly lighter and easier to carry than Apple's own Macintosh Portable, which became available at around the same time. However, due to Apple's refusal to license its software in read-only memory (ROM), Outbound users had to install a Mac ROM to make the computer work. The ROM was typically removed from an older Mac, a process that would render the donor Mac unusable. Even with this additional cost, a typical price of US $4,000 compared favorably to that of the Mac Portable.
The Outbound featured a built-in pointing device located below the keyboard; it was a cylinder that scrolled up and down and slid left and right.
Another popular feature is that the Outbound ran on standard camcorder batteries, rather than expensive custom batteries, as was common for most portable computers.
The Outbound Laptop was succeeded by the Outbound Notebook in 1991. Apple's introduction of the PowerBook later that year led to the demise of the Mac-compatible laptop market.
[edit] Trivia
In the movie Single White Female, Bridget Fonda's character is a computer programmer, and uses an Outbound Laptop.
[edit] External links
- Outbound Laptop on AppleFritter - review with pictures
- Outbound Laptop on LowEndMac - specifications
- Outbound Notebook on Obsolete Computer Museum - review and pictures of the Notebook model
- Article describing the Outbound Laptop (in French)