- 1. Phil Schiller's iBook stun
- (Multimedia)
- Immediately after his presentation of the iBook and its new airport feature: Marketing Director Phil Schiller jumps with his wireless connected iBook several meters down onto a gym mat - nice stunt ! ...
- 2. Just another Clamshell Clone: HP Mini 100e
- (Trivia)
- ... and education market. Technical specs: Intel Atom N455 Processor (1.66 GHz, 512 KB L2 cache), up to 2GB RAM. A 10.1-inch LED-backlit display with a resolution of 1024 x 600. Windows 7 or Linux OS. ...
- 3. iBook spare parts
- (Hardware hints)
- ... the battery, keyboard and power supply, but there are more parts you will need to keep your iBook up and running. The largest second-hand market can be found on Ebay. The cheapest way is to buy a similar ...
- 4. Codename P1: bMate, WebMate, eBook, iBook?
- (Trivia)
- David Moody, Apple's director of worldwide desktop product marketing, said during his keynote speech at Macworld Expo Singapore '98: "In the first half of 1999, we will be able to show you something completely ...
- 5. 466 SE Indigo "Cybook
- (Hardware hints)
- ... 466SE with every add-on on you could think of ! This is a Rare iBook Indigo 466SE, Rare because it was only available to edu markets- I got the iBook from an eBay seller (locally - Score!), it was obviously ...
- 6. Ronald O. Carlson, mac.blorge.com
- (iBook arguments)
- Apple’s first consumer/education notebook shipped in 1999 and broke a lot of new ground. From the durable construction and floppy-drive free design to its fruity iMac inspired styling and, of course, 802.11b ...
- 7. Brooke Crothers + Jim Davis, cnet.com
- (iBook arguments)
- But Apple still has a long way to go to regain a significant chunk of the market. Apple's market share in the U.S. retail notebook market in May was a meager 2 percent, according to Infobeads. Senior analyst ...
- 8. 30 years of Apple Products, wired.com
- (iBook arguments)
- Announced in July 1999 at Macworld New York, the iBook was perhaps the most anxiously awaited Apple computer ever. Aimed at the same consumer market as its big brother, the iMac, the iBook filled the 2x2 ...
- 9. Kevin Anderson, BBC news
- (iBook arguments)
- Apple has been pressing hard to retain its place in the education market as it offers more appealing computers to consumers, and the iBook introduced new technologies that it hopes will appeal to both ...
- 10. tidbits.com
- (iBook arguments)
- ... the consumer market with the iBook, and the designers obviously thought long and hard about which features could be cut to save money while at the same time differentiating the iBook from the PowerBook ...
- 11. Michael Krantz, time.com
- (iBook arguments)
- Now, in tangerine or blueberry, comes the iBook, Apple's "iMac to go," a clamshell-shaped laptop that promises to do for the portable market what iMac did for the desktop--sell like crazy and leave the rest ...
- 12. Joshua Coventry, LowEndMac.com
- (iBook arguments)
- It was a commercial success. Only six weeks after the unveiling, Apple received more than 140,000 advance orders. The iBook and iMac dramatically helped Apple climb back to fame, doubling Apple's market ...
- 13. iBook secrets: Charging contacts
- (Trivia)
- Many iBook users will wonder what the deeper meaning of the two conspicuous holes on the underside of their iBook is. As the clamshell iBooks were also being used in classrooms, Apple designer Jonathan ...
- 14. Bryan Appleyard, Sunday Times
- (iBook arguments)
- Having left in 1985, Jobs returned to Apple in 1997 and unleashed his corporate son, Ive. Apple's software was in a mess and its market share almost invisible. So Jobs went for taste, and Ive produced a ...
- 15. Playing Playstation 1 Games
- (Software hints)
- ... feedback controllers and pistols were not supported. After Sony tried in vain to prevent Connectix from selling the software, the group quickly bought the small company and took the product off the market. ...
- 16. iBook: Technical criticism
- (Trivia)
- The clamshell iBook was an inexpensive notebook for the consumer market, which was offered for a reasonable 1599 US dollars and therefore initially did not include many features that were reserved ...
- 17. the iMac to go
- (Trivia)
- ... for business users was called "PowerBook". For the consumer market of private users at home, at school and at university, the "i" was selected as the identifying feature. After the colorful "iMac" desktop ...