The PowerBook 100 is a portable subnotebook personal computer designed and manufactured by Sony for Apple Computer. It was introduced on October 21, 1991, at the COMDEX computer expo in Las Vegas, Nevada. Priced at US$2,300, the PowerBook was the low-end model of the first three simultaneously released PowerBooks. It has since been replaced by the Macbook Pro, which was released in September 1998 and sold for $2,000 to $3,000.
About PowerBook 100 in brief

It has since been replaced by the Macbook Pro, which was released in September 1998 and sold for $2,000 to $3,000. Apple’s then-chief executive officer John Sculley started the PowerBooks project in 1990, allocating USD 1-million for marketing. Sculpley allocated a USD1-million marketing budget to the Power Booker product line, in contrast to the USD 25-million used to market the Macintosh Classic. The project had three managers: John Medica, who managed engineering for the new laptop; Randy Battat, who was the vice president for product marketing; and Neil Selvin, who headed the marketing effort. By January 1992,Apple had sold more than 100,000 PowerBooks, by which time they were in short supply. At the end of the financial year, Apple announced its highest figures yet, USD 7.1billion in revenues and an 8% market share from 5% to 8% in four years in the last four years of the last decade of the 1990s. In December 1991, the 140 and 170 models had become more popular because they were willing to pay more for a built in floppy drive and a second serial port, which the second PowerBook lacked. It had a Motorola 68000 16-megahertz processor, 2-8 megabytes of memory, and a 9-inch monochrome backlit liquid crystal display with 640 × 400 pixel resolution, and the System 7. 1 operating system.
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This page is based on the article PowerBook 100 published in Wikipedia (as of Dec. 03, 2020) and was automatically summarized using artificial intelligence.






