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WOW!  Very Rare Apple Macintosh 180C Powerbook with Deluxe Leather Carrying Case

$ 262.41

Availability: 100 in stock
  • Brand: Apple
  • All returns accepted: ReturnsNotAccepted

    Description

    WOW!  Very Rare Apple Macintosh 180C Powerbook with Deluxe Leather Carrying Case, 3 chargers and a mouse
    Today in Apple history: The first great color PowerBook arrives
    June 7, 1993:
    Apple debuts the PowerBook 180c, a solid upgrade that brings a world of dazzling colors to the company’s laptop line.
    The 180c’s big improvement over the grayscale PowerBook 180, which launched the previous October, is its active-matrix, 256-color screen. It’s something of a novelty for laptops in the early 1990s.
    PowerBook 180c: A great portable Mac
    The PowerBook 180c was one of the high-end models in Apple’s enormously successful
    PowerBook 100 series
    . Launched in late 1991, the PowerBook quickly became a staple of Apple’s product line. It also proved a well-deserved commercial and critical smash.
    The PowerBook 180c wasn’t the first color PowerBook (it was beaten to that title by the
    PowerBook 165c
    ), but it was the first to offer high-quality color.
    The PowerBook 165c sported an 8.4-inch, passive-matrix color display, which could appear dim if not viewed head-on under ideal conditions. The 180c, meanwhile, boasted a backlit active-matrix display that presented high-quality color from whichever angle you looked at it.
    In short, this was the first great color display on a Mac laptop.
    It also featured a slightly higher resolution than the PowerBook 165c, being the first PowerBook to natively run at 640×480 pixels, rather than the 165c’s 640×400.
    The PowerBook 180c also boasted impressive specs. It came with a zippy 33 MHz Motorola 68030 CPU and 6882 math coprocessor. It packed 4MB of RAM (expandable to 14MB using an additional RAM card). Despite its chunky case design, the laptop proved comfortable to use. This model remained in great demand for its entire lifespan.
    Unlike today’s MacBooks, the PowerBook featured a bunch of ports. You got a plug for Apple Desktop Bus services, two RS-422 serial ports, a SCSI port, microphone and speaker jacks — even a bay for a modem. In addition, users could output to external monitors using a 256-color video connector.
    BUY WITH CONFIDENCE- stored in a smoke-free Collector's Vault although no one has powered it up for years.  An amazing piece of Apple Computer History.