One of Apple’s most popular series of portable computers celebrates its 30th anniversary this month.
The PowerBook 500 series first launched on May 16, 1994, with the PowerBook 540c, a notebook computer deemed by many as the best laptop available at the time, with an unexpectedly high demand that resulted in shortages post-launch.
Apple’s PowerBook 540c was wildly expensive in 1994, with the active-matrix model priced at about $4,500 and the dual-scan passive-matrix model at about $2,750.
Thirty years later, those prices would equate to $9,483 and $5,795, respectively. The 540c wasn’t a cheap laptop, but according to Cult of Mac, it was a “triumph on every level” and “packed with innovative features.”
While its specs pale compared to modern laptops, the 540c model was ingenious for its time. It paved the way for today’s MacBooks by debuting many industry-first and PowerBook-first features.
Innovative specs and features of Apple’s PowerBook 540c in 1994
In the computer industry, the PowerBook 540c was the first to feature speakers with 16-bit stereo sound, a trackpad, an Ethernet port via AAUI, and “intelligent” NiMH batteries with on-board circuitry to monitor the battery’s health.
And for the PowerBook line specifically, the 540c was the first model to be equipped with a 33MHz Motorola 68LC040 CPU, which Cult of Mac says made it “impressively fast,” with speeds “80% faster than the speediest previous PowerBook” in benchmark tests.
While its speedy 68LC040 CPU and 4 – 36 MB of RAM facilitated excellent performance, the 540c’s shining feature was its 16-bit portable display, another world first, according to Cult of Mac.
Apple claimed at the time that it “may well be the finest screen to ever grace a notebook computer,” with its 640 x 400 resolution and the active-matrix display able to show thousands of colors at once, that was probably a spot-on claim.
The 540c was also the first PowerBook to debut a full-size keyboard with function keys, two battery bays, and its CPU on a daughtercard, which allowed for PowerPC and 68040 upgrades. Inside, it packed a whopping 160 – 750 MB of storage space and ran on Mac OS 7.1.1 out of the box.
Despite being almost 30 years old, the 540c still has dedicated fans today.
Three years ago, @CraigLearmont posted his PowerBook 540c on r/Vintage Apple, still functional and running Mac OS 8.1 with a Big Sur desktop.
Redditor @MrFahrenheit_451 commented that they also had one and it was “really good for 68k-specific apps and games.”
By the time the line was discontinued, almost 600,000 PowerBook 500 series units were produced, double that of the previous PowerBook 5300 series. The 540c was officially discontinued on April 1, 1996 and succeeded by the PowerBook 190, but many of its features live on in modern MacBooks.
How Apple’s PowerBook 540c shows up in modern MacBooks
Apple’s recent MacBooks are missing the Ethernet port that debuted on the 540c, but today’s MacBooks are still equipped with trackpads and stereo speakers, albeit with many upgrades, like haptic feedback, gestures, and higher-quality speaker hardware and software.
While modern MacBooks clearly outpace the PowerBook 540c in terms of specs—with a higher-res display, a much more powerful processor, and more RAM and storage—the same ambition we saw from Apple when creating the 540c is still present in 2023 MacBooks.
Modern MacBooks continue to impress with industry firsts, like Apple’s Silicon chips, and legendary features like insanely long battery life and crisp, vibrant Liquid Retina XDR displays. 30 years from now, I bet we’ll be seeing Reddit posts about how well Apple’s 2023 Macs held up.