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March 9, 2005 7:51 AM PST

New and Noteworthy: Top gadget of all time: The PowerBook 100; A Look Inside the iPod Shuffle; more

by CNET staff

Top gadget of all time: The PowerBook 100 Mobile PC Magazine has picked the "top 100 gadgets of all time. On the list are several Apple innovations including the Newton MessagePad 120 at #39, the PowerBook 500 at #22, and the iPod at #12. The #1 spot, however, goes to the notebook computer that turned the industry on its ear: The PowerBook 100. The editors of Mobile PC Magazine write "Never mind the Apple versus PC debate: Until Apple unveiled this 5.1-pound machine, most "portable" computers were curiosities for technophiles with superior upper-body strength. But the PowerBook 100's greatest and most lasting innovation was to move the keyboard toward the screen, leaving natural wrist rests up front, as well as providing an obvious place for a trackball. It seems like the natural layout now, but that's because the entire industry aped Apple within months. The first PowerBooks captured an astounding 40 percent of the market, but more important, they turned notebook computers into mainstream products and ushered in the era of mobile computing that we're still living in today." More.

A Look Inside the iPod Shuffle C.K. Sample has posted a look inside the iPod Shuffle's file structure. More.

Creative Zen Micro vs iPod Omar Shahine has posted a comparative review of the Rio Carbon and the Apple iPod, noting: "For the past few months I used the Rio Carbon. While it fared well, there were a couple of things I didn't like about the device. There was no hardware hold button, and the audio menu was not sticky and always dropped you back to the audio list, rather than your last selection. So, I decided to give the Creative Zen Micro a shot. I happen to love the device, and in many ways I find it's feature set to be better than the iPod. The build quality and fit and finish aren't as good as the iPod, but this device comes closer to anything else I've tried. I suspect that it will be a matter of months, or a year before Creative and iRiver have matched Apple in every way while providing some features the iPod still doesn't have." More.

Apple's memory price premiums AnandTech has posted an article detailing Apple's price premium for RAM when compared to other vendors. "The prices [...] shouldn't be any surprise, as all manufacturers charge an arm and a leg for their direct memory upgrades, yet some users are often afraid to install memory purchased from someone other than Apple." More. [For more information about "bad RAM" and Mac OS X, see this report]

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    by baddawg65 March 9, 2005 10:19 AM PST
    My first computer I bought was an PowerBook 100. They had big sale in 1988 and I bought one for $600. It was great in size and weight but limited performance. It only could hold 8MB RAM, it an 16MHz processor and 8-bit grey scale screen. I did alot of development on it and used it to its limits. I finally sold it for an surprising $1000 in 1995. The only computing device I ever sold for more that I paid for.
    Reply to this comment
    by John Sawyer March 9, 2005 4:32 PM PST
    The Powerbook 100 was a collaboration between Apple and Sony; in fact, one of its "code" names was Asahi (which I think is a Japanese surname). I've always wondered how much of its design was Apple and how much was Sony. I know the logic board was Sony's doing, but the looks of the plastic case might have been all Apple. According to www.answers.com/topic/powerbook, Apple sent the schematics of the Macintosh Portable to Sony, and Sony figured out how to make the logic board smaller, but the similar-looking Powerbook 140 and 170 were all-Apple, including the logic board, so I don't know why Apple needed Sony to create the 100's logic board.
    Reply to this comment