PowerBook 3400c

PowerBook 3400c series

Apple PowerBook 3400c/200
Developer Apple Computer
Release date 17 February 1997
Discontinued 7 November, 1997
Operating system Mac OS 7.6
CPU PowerPC 603e, 180–240 MHz

The PowerBook 3400c was a laptop computer in the PowerBook line manufactured by Apple Computer from February to November 1997. It was, briefly, the swiftest laptop in the world.[1] Using the PowerPC 603e processor running at speeds of up to 240 MHz, this PowerBook was the first to feature a PCI architecture,[2] EDO memory,[3] and a 64-bit wide, 40MHz internal bus.[4] It was also the first PowerBook to feature a PC card slot capable of being used as a zoomed video port.[5] Like all Apple laptops since the PowerBook 500 series, it featured a built-in trackpad as the pointing device.

Contents

Specifications

The PowerBook 3400c series was issued in three different models, distinguished primarily by their processor speed. The base model ran at 180 MHz, and the two higher end models ran at 200 MHz and 240 MHz. Thus, the different models were referred to as the 3400c/180, 3400c/200, and 3400c/240. The 3400c/180 model was usually sold with only a built-in modem and a floppy drive; all 3400c/200 and 3400c/240 machines came with a built-in modem/Ethernet combination port and hot-swappable 1.4 MB floppy disk and CD drives. The only other difference between them was the size of the hard drive, ranging from 1.3 to 3.0 GB depending on the model.[3]

Names

Prior to the PowerBook 3400c series, the names of PowerBooks reflected (among other things) the type of screen they had installed. For example, the PowerBook 1400cs had a passive matrix screen, and the 1400c an active matrix screen. Because all PowerBook 3400c computers came with the same 16-bit color, active matrix screen, the "c" designation at the end of the PowerBook 3400c name was somewhat superfluous, and is often dropped, even by Apple itself, for example in the user's manual.[2] The internal code name used for the PowerBook 3400c during development was "Hooper".[6]

Industrial Design

In terms of industrial design the PowerBook 3400c owed a lot to the earlier PowerBook 5300 series. There were some key changes made though, including the larger LCD screen; a wider removable drive bay allowing the use of CD readers; and a curved display housing that allowed for the inclusion of a second set of loudspeakers.[6]

The first generation of G3 PowerBooks retained the same external appearance as the PowerBook 3400c.

CardBus compatibility

Like the PowerBook 5300 series, the 3400s came with a pair of PC card slots, but whereas those on the 5300s were strictly 16-bit device compatible, those on the 3400s were, in theory at least, compatible with 32-bit CardBus cards being based around the 32-bit Texas Instruments PCI1130 PC card controller. In reality, the PC card slots were designed to physically accept only 16-bit cards, though many users have managed to get a variety of CardBus cards to work with them.[7][8] Using CardBus cards allows 3400 Series PowerBooks to be used with, for example, USB devices like printers and FireWire devices such as iPods.

Models

3400/180 3400/200 3400/240
Apple Part # M3553
Processor 603ev
CPU Speed 180 MHz 200 MHz 240 MHz
Built-in RAM(MiB) 16
Maximum RAM (MiB) 144
Hard drive (GB) 1.3 2 3
Removable drives Floppy drive (CD optional) Floppy + CD
Display 12.1" color, active matrix
Resolution/Color 800×600/32K
Networking Modem, Infrared, Ethernet (optional) Modem, Infrared, Ethernet

References

  1. ^ macopinion.com: PowerBook 3400c -- A Potentially Great 'Book With Unfortunate Timing (latest Archive.org copy)
  2. ^ a b Macintosh PowerBook User's Manual, p 175. Apple Computer, 1997.
  3. ^ a b Macintosh PowerBook 3400 Technical Information, p 1. Apple Computer, 1997.
  4. ^ Apple Computer: Macintosh PowerBook 3400c/180: Technical Specification
  5. ^ Macintosh PowerBook User's Manual, p 55. Apple Computer, 1997.
  6. ^ a b Paul Kunkel & Rick English, Apple Design pp 265–267, Graphis. ISBN 1-8880-0125-9.
  7. ^ Rob Frohne: Cardbus for your Powerbook 3400c or Kanga G3!
  8. ^ Dan Palka: Adventures with the PowerBook 3400c/240 - FireWire

External links