Low End Mac Reader Specials
TypeStyler For Mac OS X is Now Shipping! Download The Free Fully Functional 60 Day Tryout at www.typestyler.com
OWC: Plug & Play Hardware RAID up to 8.0TB. High Performance, Data Redundant Solutions. FireWire 800, FireWire 400, USB2, or eSATA. Hot Swappable Bays, Data Rates over 200MB/s. Click here
Don't install Parallels to play poker online! Poker Mac will show you how
to download and install a native Mac poker application such as Full
Tilt Poker Mac.
Laptop Hardware Provided by TechRestore - Overnight Mac & iPod Repairs.
Compare products like desktop computers, apple laptops, apple macs, and LCD Monitors side by side! All the information and reviews to make the best purchasing decision for new mobile phones, sat nav systems, or MP3 players. The Ciao online shopping community makes searching products easy for you.
'Book Value
Low End Mac's Compleat Guide to Clamshell iBooks
Charles Moore - 2008.04.17 - Tip Jar
Popularity: ![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
No, it isn't a typo. Compleat is a legitimate, albeit archaic, spelling for complete. As Kenneth G. Wilson says in The Columbia Guide to Standard American English: "This obsolete spelling of the adjective complete suggests an air of antiquity that seems to please some of those who name things...." We find that fitting for Low End Mac's Compleat Guides to "obsolete" hardware and software.
I very much enjoyed reading Carl Nygren's column this week about his Graphite clamshell iBook SE. Wow! A cherry clamshell complete with built-in DVD drive, manuals, and CD for fifty bucks. I'm envious.
The Paris iBooks
Along with the 12" PowerBook, the clamshell is one of my
favorite Apple notebooks that I haven't actually owned, although I came
close - especially after the clamshell's only major upgrade was rolled
out in September 2000 at Macworld Expo Paris (Carl's iBook is one of
these "Paris" models).
While under the hood, RAM remained at 64 MB and bus speed at 66 MHz, the processor specs were changed from the former PowerPC 750 with 512 KB of Level 2 cache running at 150 MHz and 183 MHz (half of CPU speed), to IBM's then-new 750cx chips with 256 KB of onboard cache running at 366 MHz and 466 MHz. The hard drive size was increased to 10 GB, and the other big news was that the iBook finally had FireWire and an "AV" video-out port (no VGA or ADC monitor port, however). To top it off, the 466 MHz SE came with a DVD-ROM drive.
The Paris iBooks also got the ATI Rage Mobility 128 video card with 8 MB of VRAM that also did yeoman service in the Pismo and early dual USB iBooks. Still no sound-in, although increased availability of USB microphones had mitigated that issue somewhat. The price on the standard iBook was also dropped by $100 to $1,499 - the same price point as today's black 2.4 GHz MacBook.
Replacing WallStreet
In late
2000 and early 2001, I was in the hunt for a system upgrade from the
WallStreet LE
PowerBook I had been using as my production workhorse for the
previous couple of years. I was weighing the relative merits of the
then-current Lombard (and
later the Pismo) vs.
the new iBooks. The main sticking point for me was the clamshell's
12.1" 800 x 600 resolution display. I was intimately familiar with this
screen, since it was the same one used in my 233 MHz WallStreet LE, and
its cramped confines were a big part of the impetus for moving up to a
new system.
I can (and still do, with my two Pismo PowerBooks) get along quite happily with a 1024 x 768 pixel display, and if the clamshell had been available with the 12.1" screen of that resolution (which came with the dual USB iBook in May 2001), I might well have bought one, because in most other respects the 466 MHz SE model would have suited my requirements nicely - and eventually a 700 MHz dual USB iBook did displace the WallStreet.
On the other hand, my wife, who used the WallStreet for several years after I retired it from production service, says she preferred the 800 x 600 display after she moved on to the 700 MHz iBook as her next hand-me-down system, although she has gotten used to it and now says she loves the little iceBook.
Another issue with the iBooks, both clamshell and iceBook, is that they were (understatement) not really user serviceable when it came to hard drive upgrades. Changing the hard drive in a WallStreet or Pismo is a 10 to 15 minute job. With the iBook, it's not recommended at all for folks who are not trained technicians, and with good reason.
However, the Paris revisions fixed or eliminated most of the shortcomings that had decided us against the previous generation clamshell iBook in early 2000 when one of my offspring was obliged to replace a stolen WallStreet with a new 'Book.
iBook G3/300 vs. Lombard
We weighed the relative merits of purchasing an iBook vs. a Lombard PowerBook prior to the release of the Paris iBooks. This was our comparative analysis:
- Lombard offered SCSI support for his CD burner. FireWire could be added with a PC Card adapter when and if the need arose.
- Lombard came with 64 MB of RAM; the iBook only 32 MB, which negated some of the price advantage.
- iBook officially supported a maximum of 160 MB of RAM.
- Lombard had a bigger hard drive.
- Lombard had a 14.1" 1024 x 768 display; iBook a 12.1" 800 x 600 display.
- Lombard (333 MHz) had a faster processor with a larger processor cache
- Lombard had sound-in support, a microphone, and stereo speakers; iBook had no sound in, no microphone, and a none-too-great mono speaker.
- No provision for adding FireWire support to the iBook.
- Lombard had 8 MB of VRAM and an ATI Rage Pro Video card; iBook had 4 MB VRAM and the less wonderful ATI Rage Mobility video card
- Lombard had an expansion bay and PC Card slot; iBook had neither
- Lombard has two USB ports; iBook has only one
- iBook had no IrDA port or video-out port; Lombard had both
The standard iBook and the low-end PowerBook were priced at at $1,599 and $2,499 respectively - a spread of $900.
iBook SE G3/366 vs. Pismo
However, at the same time as the Pismo PowerBook was released at Macworld Expo Tokyo 2000, Apple also added an upmarket iBook SE model at $1,799 and upgraded the basic 300 MHz iBook, which got 64 MB of standard RAM and a 6 GB hard drive, the same as the low-end (400 MHz) Pismo PowerBook, which arguably narrowed the value gap. Or did it?
Updating our iBook/PowerBook comparison:
- SCSI was no longer a comparison issue - neither machine had it. But Pismo came with two FireWire ports. iBook (Early 2000) still had no FireWire support.
- Both came with 64 MB of RAM.
- iBook now supported up to 320 MB of RAM; Pismo supported up 512 MB, or even 1 GB with a couple of minor functional limitations.
- Both computers came with a 6 GB hard drive, but Pismo could be built to order with up to 18 GB.
- Pismo had a 14.1" 1024 x 768 display; iBook a 12.1" 800 x 600 display.
- The PowerBook's base processor was now 400 MHz with 1 MB backside cache - 33% faster in clock speed and a 100% more cache than iBook's 183 MHz 512 KB backside cache. Pismo also had a 100 MHz system bus, versus iBook's 66 MHz bus.
- Pismo had sound-in support, a microphone, and stereo speakers; iBook still had no sound-in, no microphone, and a none-too-great mono speaker.
- Still no provision for adding FireWire support to the iBook.
- Pismo still had 8 MB of VRAM but had jumped way ahead of iBook in video support with its powerful ATI Rage Mobility 128 graphics controller, plus support for a Zoom Video PC Card; iBook still had 4 MB VRAM and the less wonderful ATI Rage Mobility graphics controller with 2x AGP.
- Pismo had an expansion bay and PC Card slot; iBook still had neither.
- Pismo had two USB ports; iBook had only one.
- iBook had no IrDA port or video-out port; Pismo had both, and also supported dual displays.
- Pismo came standard with a DVD-ROM drive; iBook did not support DVD.
In my estimation, Pismo still had a substantial value edge, and in some respects (DVD, video support, processor speed, bigger cache, faster system bus) had widened it. The iBook's bigger hard drive and more standard RAM helped, but they were not compelling.
iBook Value
The first-iteration iBook SE came in Graphite, had a 366 MHz processor, and cost $200 more than the standard Blueberry and Tangerine iBooks. The aesthetics alone might have been worth the extra $200 for some people, and with OS X coming, you wanted all the processor power you could get, so I figured the extra value was there compared with the standard iBook - but it was questionable compared with the PowerBook if you could handle the extra capital outlay.
Back in March 2000, Bare Feats did a benchmark comparison among four Macs, The high side of the low end meets the low end of the high side, including a 400 MHz Pismo and an iBook SE. The Pismo 400 tested had 64 MB RAM and 6 GB Toshiba hard drive, while the iBook SE also had 64 MB RAM and 6 GB Toshiba Drive (times have certainly changed in RAM and hard drive capacity over the past seven years!).
On a WordPerfect 3.5 find/replace, Pismo needed 4.3 seconds and iBook SE 5 seconds. In a WordPerfect scroll test, Pismo smoked iBook SE at 6.5 seconds vs. 15 seconds. Pismo performed a Bryce 3D 4.0 rendering test in 65 seconds - iBook SE needed 75 seconds. In a Quake 3 game demo, Pismo managed 29.8 frames per second - iBook SE only 6.9 frames per second. On hard drive speed (ATTO Express-Pro Tools 2.3 sustained write speed), Pismo handled 13.6 MB per second, with iBook SE slightly slower at 12.4 MB per second.
Bare Feats' conclusions were that Pismo was "impressive all except the drive speed," but that the iBook SE "is a wimp." Their advice? "Take a bigger loan and buy the Pismo."
The iBook SE was a pretty powerful computer for the money.
Was the iBook SE a wimp? That's probably a bit harsh, unless you were a gamer or into serious graphics video editing, notwithstanding the poor WordPerfect scrolling result. When the Pismo's more powerful video card and/or extra 512 KB of L2 cache come into play, the iBook is bound to pale by comparison. But there is that $700 difference in price to consider as well. The iBook SE was a pretty powerful computer for the money.
But I never bought one, and the fact that seven years later I still have two Pismos in "B-team" production service speaks volumes. Both Pismos are significantly hotrodded with G4 processor upgrades, DVD-burning SuperDrive modules, and one has a 100 GB hard drive. The iBook, on the other hand, was not receptive to hotrodding, with a soldered-to-the-logic-board processor, the aforementioned difficulty in swapping hard drives, no expansion bay, and only one RAM upgrade slot. As a log-term value, the PowerBook has weathered the test of time much better.
Still, if I
was offered a Paris iBook SE (preferably in the relatively rare Key
Lime livery) in good condition for fifty bucks like the one Carl found,
I'd buy it in a heartbeat.
Charles Moore has been a freelance journalist since 1987 and began writing for Mac websites in May 1998. His The Road Warrior column is a regular feature on MacOpinion, and he is a news editor and columnist at Applelinks.com. If you find his articles helpful, please consider making a donation to his tip jar.
Recent \'Book ValueColumns
- Thoughts on Downsizing from a 17" 'Book to a 13" MacBook, 11.17. With its big screen, the 17" PowerBook was a real workhorse, but the smaller, lighter, faster MacBook is just about the perfect notebook computer.
- Razer Orochi: One of the Nicest Mice I've Ever Used, 11.03. The author detests the trackpad on the 17" PowerBook. This notebook gaming mouse is an absolute pleasure to use.
- Goldtouch Go! Travel Keyboard: Ergonomics for the Road Warrior, 09.29. Ergonomic keyboards designed for mobile use are few and far between. This one from Goldtouch is compact, solidly built, and very flexible.
- Retro Clamshell iBook Case Returns for Modern 'Books, 09.14. Originally designed for the clamshell iBook, the Classic Case from MacCase is back - and just right for 12" and 13" iBooks, PowerBooks, and MacBooks.
- More in the 'Book Value index.
Links for the Day
- Mac of the Day: iMac Core Duo, Jan. 2006 - The first Intel-based iMacs ran at 1.83-2.0 GHz, came with 17" and 20" displays.
- Group of the Day: Mac Pro List is for those using a Mac Pro.
- November 23 in LEM history: 99: Should I buy a USB card? - 01: Can a low-end Mac be an only Mac? - Palm Desktop without a PDA - CyberDog saves the day - 05: How Consumer Reports could compare Macs fairly - Speakers for your Mac - Living with the hi-res 15" PowerBook - Birth of the PowerBook - Daystar 1.9 GHz iMac G4 upgrade - 1.92 GHz PowerBook upgrade
- Support Low End Mac
Recent Content on Low End Mac
- Apple's Tablet an End Run Beyond Netbooks, Frank Fox, Stop the Noiz, 11.20. Whatever Apple has planned will leverage existing technologies while going beyond what its competitors can offer.
- i5 iMac Benchmarked, Mac mini 'Shouldn't Be Overlooked', Twitter Client for Classic Mac OS, and More, Mac News Review, 11.20. Also why Apple leaves the low end to others, 10.6.2 fixes video playback problem in 27" iMac, 3D Leopard and Snow Leopard performance, and more.
- Apple #4 in Reliability, Apple Tablet a Gadget for All?, HP's i7 Notebook Outdoes Mac Rivals, and More, The 'Book Review, 11.20. Also Flash 10.1 improves video on Hackintosh netbooks, thin-and-light notebooks impress, Windows XP finally on the way out, and more.
- NASA Chemical Sensor for iPhone, Smartphone Death Match, iPhone Earrings, and More, Ian R Campbell, 11.20. Also mobile phone dangers, new apps, GPS solution for iPod touch, new iPod and iPhone cases, and more.
- Replacing the Hard Drive in a Clamshell iBook, John Hatchett, Recycled Computing, 11.19. Yes, it is one of the most difficult Apple notebooks to disassemble and reassemble, but a 10 GB hard drive just will not do.
- IBM Model F: A Great Old Keyboard with an Outdated Layout, Tommy Thomas, Welcome to Macintosh, 11.19. Although it used a different technology than the revered IBM Model M keyboard, the Model F was a great keyboard in its own right.
- More links in our archive.
Recent Deals
- Best eMac Deals, 11.18. Used 1 GHz Combo, $100; SuperDrive, $269; 1.25 GHz Combo, $119; SD, $319; 1.42 GHz Combo, $289; SD, $498.
- Best Mac OS X 10.6 and Mac Box Set Deals, 11.18. "Snow Leopard", single user, $25; 5 users, $45; Mac Box Set, single user, $139; 5 users, $180; Server, $414. Shipping included.
- Best Xserve Deals, 11.18. Used 1 GHz dual G4, $649; 2.3 dual G5, $795; 3.0 4-core Xeon, $1,899; refurb 2.26 4-core, $2,499; new, $2,888; refurb 8-core, $2,999; new, $3,449; more.
- Best 15" MacBook Pro Deals, 11.17. Used 1.83 GHz, $750; 2.16, $800; 2.33, $900; refurb 2.4, $1,299; 2.53, $1,449; 2.66, $1,699; 2.8, $1,899; new 2.53, $1,579; 2.66, $1,799; more.
- Best Power Mac G4 and AGP Video Card Deals, 11.17. Used 400 MHz, $50; 933 MHz, $80; 500 dual, $60; 867 dual, $90; 1 GHz dual, $150; 1.25 GHz dual, $225; 1.42 GHz, $499.
- Best Mac OS X 10.5 Deals, 11.17. "Leopard" upgrade, $80; single user license, $135; 5 users, $173; Mac Box Set, 5 users, $230; Server, 10 users, $340; unlimited, $850. Shipping included.
- Best Mac mini Deals, 11.16. Used 1.42 GHz G4 mini, $379; 1.66 GHz Core Solo, $419; 2.0 Core 2, $450; new 2.26 GHz nVidia, $580; 2.53 GHz, $769; Server, $990.
- Best iBook G4 Deals, 11.16. Used 12" 1.07 GHz Combo, $210; 1.33 GHz, $298; 14" 1.33 GHz, $398; 1.42 GHz, $479; SuperDrive, $498.
- Best iPod shuffle Deals, 11.16. Used 1 GB, $35; 4 GB, $65; refurb 1 GB, $39; 2 GB, $59; new 2 GB, $55, 4 GB, $75. New and refurb prices include shipping.
- More deals in our archive.
About LEM | Support | Usage | Privacy | Contacts
Navigation
Used Mac Dealers
Apple History
Video Cards
Email Lists
Favorite Sites
MacSurfer
MacMinute
MacInTouch
MyAppleMenu
InfoMac
Macs Only!
The Mac Observer
Accelerate Your Mac
RetroMacCast
PB Central
MacWindows
The Vintage Mac
Museum
DealMac
DealsOnTheWeb
Mac2Sell
ramseeker
Mac Driver Museum
JAG's House
System
6 Heaven
System 7 Today
the pickle's Low-End
Mac FAQ
Abandonware
Petition
Mac vs. PC Info
Affiliates
The Apple
Store
Mac
Connection
B&H
MacMall
TechRestore
ExperCom
Crucial
Memory
batteries.com
Advertise
MacMinute
MacInTouch
MyAppleMenu
InfoMac
Macs Only!
The Mac Observer
Accelerate Your Mac
RetroMacCast
PB Central
MacWindows
The Vintage Mac
Museum
DealMac
DealsOnTheWeb
Mac2Sell
ramseeker
Mac Driver Museum
JAG's House
System 6 Heaven
System 7 Today
the pickle's Low-End
Mac FAQ
Abandonware
Petition
Mac vs. PC Info
Mac Connection
B&H
MacMall
TechRestore
ExperCom
Crucial Memory
batteries.com

