The PowerBook 140 was released in the first line of PowerBooks. It was the mid range PowerBook, between the lower end 100 and the high end 170. As with the PowerBook 170, and unlike the 100, this PowerBook featured an internal floppy drive. Codenames for this model are: Tim Lite, Tim LC, Replacements, and Leary. In 1992, it was replaced by the PowerBook 145, which was essentially a speed bump, though the PowerBook 160 essentially superseded it as the new mid-line model.
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| - The PowerBook 140 was released in the first line of PowerBooks. It was the mid range PowerBook, between the lower end 100 and the high end 170. As with the PowerBook 170, and unlike the 100, this PowerBook featured an internal floppy drive. Codenames for this model are: Tim Lite, Tim LC, Replacements, and Leary. In 1992, it was replaced by the PowerBook 145, which was essentially a speed bump, though the PowerBook 160 essentially superseded it as the new mid-line model.
- The Macintosh PowerBook 140, introduced in 1991 (along with the PowerBook 100 and PowerBook 170), was the mid-range PowerBook. As the mid-range laptop in its day, the PowerBook 140 was faster, and came with a larger display. The PowerBook 140, unlike the PowerBook 100 and the Macintosh Portable, uses a NiCad battery. Weighing in at 6.8 pounds, the PowerBook 140 zips along at 16 MHz on a Motorola 68030 chip and has 2 MB of RAM (expandable to 8 MB).
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discontinuation date
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- 145(xsd:integer)
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first release date
| - 140(xsd:integer)
- 145(xsd:integer)
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| - Apple Macintosh PowerBook 140
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- 145(xsd:integer)
- 25.0
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- 145(xsd:integer)
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abstract
| - The PowerBook 140 was released in the first line of PowerBooks. It was the mid range PowerBook, between the lower end 100 and the high end 170. As with the PowerBook 170, and unlike the 100, this PowerBook featured an internal floppy drive. Codenames for this model are: Tim Lite, Tim LC, Replacements, and Leary. In 1992, it was replaced by the PowerBook 145, which was essentially a speed bump, though the PowerBook 160 essentially superseded it as the new mid-line model.
- The Macintosh PowerBook 140, introduced in 1991 (along with the PowerBook 100 and PowerBook 170), was the mid-range PowerBook. As the mid-range laptop in its day, the PowerBook 140 was faster, and came with a larger display. The PowerBook 140, unlike the PowerBook 100 and the Macintosh Portable, uses a NiCad battery. Weighing in at 6.8 pounds, the PowerBook 140 zips along at 16 MHz on a Motorola 68030 chip and has 2 MB of RAM (expandable to 8 MB).
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