List of Macintosh Models By Case Type - Portable

Portable

"Portable" in this case means computers that are able to run on internal batteries - modern computers like the Mac mini are arguably more portable than the "luggable" Macintosh Portable, but have no integrated batteries. All modern portable Macintoshes use the notebook design, which the PowerBook series helped to establish.

  • Macintosh Portable
    • Macintosh Portable
  • PowerBook 100
    • PowerBook 100
  • PowerBook 140
    • PowerBook 140
    • PowerBook 150
    • PowerBook 160
    • PowerBook 170
    • PowerBook 180
  • PowerBook Duo
    • PowerBook Duo 210
    • PowerBook Duo 230
    • PowerBook Duo 250
    • PowerBook Duo 270
    • PowerBook Duo 280
    • PowerBook Duo 2300
  • PowerBook 520
    • PowerBook 520
    • PowerBook 540
    • PowerBook 550
  • PowerBook 5300
    • PowerBook 5300
    • PowerBook 190
  • PowerBook 1400
    • PowerBook 1400
  • PowerBook 3400
    • PowerBook 3400
    • PowerBook G3 "Kanga"
  • PowerBook 2400
    • PowerBook 2400c
  • PowerBook G3 Series
    • PowerBook G3 Series
  • PowerBook G3
    • PB G3 "Lombard"
    • PowerBook "Pismo"
  • iBook
    • iBook
    • iBook SE
  • PowerBook G4
    • PowerBook G4
  • iBook (white)
    • iBook G3 (white)
    • iBook G4
  • PowerBook G4 "Aluminum"
    • PowerBook G4 "Aluminum"
  • MacBook Pro
    • MacBook Pro
  • MacBook
    • MacBook
  • MacBook Air
    • MacBook Air
  • Aluminum Unibody
    • MacBook AluUni
    • MacBook Pro AluUni

Read more about this topic:  List Of Macintosh Models By Case Type

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    Charles Dickens (1812–1870)

    In the quilts I had found good objects—hospitable, warm, with soft edges yet resistant, with boundaries yet suggesting a continuous safe expanse, a field that could be bundled, a bundle that could be unfurled, portable equipment, light, washable, long-lasting, colorful, versatile, functional and ornamental, private and universal, mine and thine.
    Radka Donnell-Vogt, U.S. quiltmaker. As quoted in Lives and Works, by Lynn F. Miller and Sally S. Swenson (1981)

    Fewer and fewer Americans possess objects that have a patina, old furniture, grandparents’ pots and pans—the used things, warm with generations of human touch, ... essential to a human landscape. Instead, we have our paper phantoms, transistorized landscapes. A featherweight portable museum.
    Susan Sontag (b. 1933)