Wow, a 33 mhx 68lC040! That's the rough equivelant of a Quadra 630 but without some of the FPU functions.
(sorry I just get all excited about the old Mac hardware.

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I've got a PowerBook 5300 Seed Unit! (very late prototype). On the bottom it has a label: M2 Seed Unit Not for Resale, and a bar code: Powerbook Development Team PB01916. It has (IIRc) a 1 gig HD, and a color, active-matrix (TFT) LCD screen. It looks exactly like a production 5300, but the left side product label (under the screen) says Powerbook XXXX. The right side label is blank.
I've also got a couple Powerbook 1400s around here somewhere. One even has a BookCovers clear plastic cover on it! (You could print your own art on A4 paper, cut it out following the template, and have a custom laptop cover. It was kinda fun.)
The Duos are awesome! Small, lightweight laptops that just have the motherboard, keyboard, trackball (later models had trackpads) and screen. Everything else was connected with the Duo Dock (you put your laptop into it and it became a full featured desktop machine, complete with monitor, external hard drive and NuBus expansion slots) or the MiniDock (A power strip of sorts that clipped to the back of the Duo to give it all the desktop ports including ADB and SCSI), or MicroDocks (mini-MiniDocks that just had any one of the MiniDock ports and an ADB port). I have a couple Duo 230s (68040@25 mhz) and a 2300c (PowerPC 601@100mhz).
But by far the oldest laptop I have is my Zenith Datasystems TranSport. 16 meg hard drive, 720k floppy drive, 8086 processor (5 mhz?) and a built in very low baud modem (it died so I removed it and use its space for floppy storage). Unfortunately the LCD's backlight is wearing out, and it gives me "Divide Overflow" errors on startup. Oh well, what do you expect after 20 years or so?
(sorry everyone. But I said I get excited about old Mac hardware!

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