IBM ThinkPad 240

IBM ThinkPad 240-series
Manufacturer IBM
Introduced June 1999 (1999-06)
Discontinued 2001
Cost USD$1999.00 (Thinkpad 240, 16 June 1999)[1]
Processor Intel Mobile Celeron 300, Pentium III
Frequency 300-600 MHz
Memory 64 MB RAM (maximum 320 MB)
Ports VGA out, serial port, parallel port, IBM external drive port, CardBus, Mini PCI, USB 1.0
Weight 2.9 lb (1.3 kg)
Dimensions 10.2 x 8.0 x 1.05" (260.0 x 202.0 x 26.6 mm)

IBM ThinkPad 240 is an ultra-portable laptop computer designed and produced by IBM from June 1999 to 2001. It is one of the few ThinkPad 200 series models made available in America and smallest and lightest ThinkPad model produced to date. The 240 series was discontinued, and it (as well as the 570 series) was replaced with the ThinkPad X series in 2000.

Features

The first 240 series models included the 300 MHz Mobile Celeron processor, 64 MB built-in RAM and one slot for memory expansion (maximum 320 MB). The laptop also was one of the first to feature the Mini PCI card slot. No built-in optical drive or diskette drive was included due to size limitations. External drive access was via a USB 1.0 port and/or the IBM external floppy drive connector. The unit shipped either with a standard 6 GB hard disk drive or with the 12 GB upgrade option.

All 240 series models feature a 10.4 TFT display, and the first models featured NeoMagic MagicGraph128XD graphics chips with 2 MB of video memory. The 240 is capable of displaying up to SVGA (800x600) on the TFT display, with XGA output available to an external monitor. All 240s also have audio controllers and VGA ports to connect to external display devices.

Models

References

  1. "A Notebook That's Kind to Fingers". Business Week. 1999-06-26. Retrieved 2012-08-23.
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