Another candidate logic board for you here Trash: Balloonboard. 520MHz ARM with your choice of CPLD or FPGA onboard.
Maybe!got room for one of these
http://www.mini-box.com/Mainboards-Nano-iTX
Pushing my 2300c Bookkeeping/field AI8 Workstation as hard as I could, well into its period of obsolescence and then for a few years past when it was undeniably obsolete! [Man where were you 10 years ago?
I'll bet it really roasts you, now that you've discovered that all you needed to do "back in the day" was to desolder either the "chip select" or "power" leg of the DuoDock's DeclROM to achieve what you wanted to do, doesn't it?I was using a Duo Dock with Audiomedia II cards and wanted a portable rig I could move around without having to drag a mouse, keyboard and monitor.
Ouch! The only reason I ever tried any of this, about eight years ago, was to "win" the offered prize over on 'fritter of some free Mac or other . . . and to produce a really cool hack!I also wanted a full featured presentation rig with a video card, so I could drive the show from a distance using mirroring to show one thing on a projector and have other applications on the LCD "hidden" from the audience.

Apple is just Apple, they don't need reasons for doing a metric crapload of stupid things, just be grateful that they did several metric craploads of things that were really bright, creative and well ahead of the WinTel Hegemony's utterly futile attempts at "drafting" Apple's lead. (Stock Car Racin' terminology . . .Why-oh-why Apple did this I will never know. I have heard everything from they wanted to force you to buy a monitor and didn't want it to compete with a high end PowerBook, which in those days wasn't much smaller or lighter.
Well, as much as it seems that way ... there is always a reason. I doubt we'll ever know unless the changes were detailed in confidential development notes now archived at Stanford. Most likely, another reason I heard was that they did not want to tax the power supply by powering the internal LCD. Combined with the cost savings of not supporting a larger PSU, nor including spanning capabilities on the dock, greed is the most likely reason. Which come to think about it seems to be the primary motivation behind everything at Apple.Apple is just Apple, they don't need reasons for doing a metric crapload of stupid things,
Which, taken in context, was probably short sighted in terms of market share growth, but good for the next quarter's stockholder's report . . . which was INDESCRIBABLY STUPID! IMHO, and speaking theoretically of course!Well, as much as it seems that way ... there is always a reason . . .Apple is just Apple, they don't need reasons for doing a metric crapload of stupid things,
One of Apple's major shortcomings was to place an overriding importance on form/styling, while scrimping on function by designing a custom $3.98 per unit , industry SUB-Standard, woefully underpowered supply for every other machine produced!. . . I heard was that they did not want to tax the power supply by powering the internal LCD. Combined with the cost savings of not supporting a larger PSU . . .
. . . as well as most human activity, to be fair to Apple. :. . . nor including spanning capabilities on the dock, greed is the most likely reason. Which come to think about it seems to be the primary motivation behind everything at Apple.
Just out of curiosity, are you looking for something that fits the original hole in the case plastics without modification, or something that by some definition of the word "fits" in the lid? (original bezel opening be darned?) You've expressed a desire for having some super-multi-mega pixel count panel, but I have doubts you'll find anything better than 1024x768 in a 4x3 aspect ratio that'll fit. (By either definition.)If anyone has suggestions for LCD panels that might be appropriate for the Duo's lid, please post them.
I never meant to give that impression, a FULL format 1024 x 768 will stomp any NetBook's 1024 x 600+- display just fine for me!I don't think you're getting megapixel resolution.
Your logic is impeccable and your advice is very wise as always, EudiG!I still think you'd be much better off buying a small subnotebook and restuffing it into the Duo case and forgetting this "piece it together from pieces" idea. Ala Carte LCD panels in these resolutions are $400 and up. I'm sure you could find a Pentium M subnotebook for about that price to use as your innards, and it'd run Ubuntu just fine.
Candidate ahoy!I shall begin the search for such a 'book
A bit under spec, but a later model, perhaps?It's tiny - about the same footprint as a Duo, a little thinner / and port replicator.
Not a chance, we're lookin' for newer & better parts than HP_Mini's specs!Candidate ahoy!
What toothy said! [. . . Pentium M subnotebook for about that price to use as your innards . . .
Out of curiosity I've been doing a little noodling myself to get some idea what your choices would be for donor laptops with small enough screens, and it turns out that finding 4x3 aspect XGA-res 10.4-inch models in the US may be tough. There are a number of "Japanese only" machines that use that size, but Americans seem to draw the line at 12 inch displays for anything remotely modern. Probably the most "available" machine you're going to find is the Sony Vaio X505 or one of its relatives.I shall begin the search for such a 'book and forget about PCB design for individual parts. I'll concentrate on noodling out methods to break all, except the most necessary of, the 'book's connections out the Duo's tuschie. I shall also do so, with or without utilizing the Docking Connector, on the basis of practicality versus DuoDock-alicious Orthodoxy.
YUGO!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!. . . it would be a sin to cut up one of those to stuff in a Duo carcass. It's less than half an inch thick, for crying out loud! It'd be like cutting up a Lotus Elise to re-engine your old Yugo. :^b
Widescreen at a MINIMUM of a full 768 pixels high is no problem at all! It's a FEATURE! I'll do anything necessary to have a Duo's plastics enfold ANY sized donor that'll kick some NetBook@$$, however "current cool" the design! I'd pick a retro-cool look over that ANY day of the week.The one other option you could consider, if you can yield on the aspect ratio issue in favor of more pixels, is that there are/were a number of 1280x768 or 1366x768 "widescreen" laptops that had 10.6 to 11.1 inch displays. The Sony Vaio TX series is one, but it looks like at least Asus, Fujitsu, and Averatec had similar models. The Viao is 10.7" inches wide, so *hypothetically* you might get that screen into the Duo lid with more room to spare than the full-height Thinkpad one. The vertical dimension would probably be about the same as the original screen.
As I said, bite your tongue, you pointy toothed carnosaur! The Duo/DuoDock/Mini/MicroDock system'sOf course, what comes around with any of these is once you get your hands on one will you really want to ruin it by stuffing it into a PowerBook Duo's case plastics? ;^) These are all thinner and lighter and sexier than your target chassis. I know you've expressed a preference for a trackball over a trackpad, but doesn't the 2300c (and that's what I've gotten the impression you have) have a trackpad anyway?
"The MG TD is a standard transmission, rear-wheel-drive roadster. It represents the state-of-the-art in engine design, transmission, and suspension... for 1952. Which means, what? The engine breaks frequently, it leaks oil almost as fast as it burns gas, and it handles only marginally better than a bathtub."YUGO!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!. . . it would be a sin to cut up one of those to stuff in a Duo carcass. It's less than half an inch thick, for crying out loud! It'd be like cutting up a Lotus Elise to re-engine your old Yugo. :^bHow dare you?!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! :O![]()
. . . think MG-TD Roadster! [] ]'> The Duo
factor will NEVER sink THAT low! [
] ]'>
Personally I think the Compaq Portable III is a nice piece of work, as is the Morrow Pivot, but I don't think I'd have the heart to seriously hack either one, at least if it were in complete working condition. (Although the Pivot *would* be a great candidate for a widescreen LCD...)Widescreen at a MINIMUM of a full 768 pixels high is no problem at all! It's a FEATURE! I'll do anything necessary to have a Duo's plastics enfold ANY sized donor that'll kick some NetBook@$$, however "current cool" the design! I'd pick a retro-cool look over that ANY day of the week.
My only regret is that there are no transportable computers with thefactor of "Mid Century Modern Design" as candidates for hacking!
ROTFLMAO!!!!!!!!!!!!!! :lol: I couldn't agree more, but TDs were undeniably fun to drive (except for old windbags that're prone to hyperbole) and had aGiven the quality of Apple's engineering in the mid-90's... sure, I'll go with that as an apt comparison for the PowerBook Duo 2300c. ;^)
HEH! }Personally I think the Compaq Portable III is a nice piece of work, as is the Morrow Pivot, but I don't think I'd have the heart to seriously hack either one, at least if it were in complete working condition. (Although the Pivot *would* be a great candidate for a widescreen LCD...)
Yes it did, but the beauty of the 2300 was that it was a hybrid machine. A blessing and a curse when it came to the CPU and bus architecture. But, it used the exact same ADB connector that the trackball did. In fact Powerbookguy.com at my encouragement sold a trackball retrograde kit which consisted of a 280c case top with a trackball assembly. All you did was remover the trackpad and replace it with the new lid and trackball which even used the same mounting screws.I know you've expressed a preference for a trackball over a trackpad, but doesn't the 2300c (and that's what I've gotten the impression you have) have a trackpad anyway?
I couldn't agree more. I have almost the entire collection of them and a variety of their docks (both Apple and third-party).The design of the whole and its parts has yet to be equalled. Apple's only failing with the Duo was that they intentionally crippled it to prevent it from competing with the desktops. There was absolutely nothing like it on the market at the time or since. Everything about the system was so elegant. The cheap PC port replicators that pass for docking solutions then and today are a pale and pathetic imitator of what the Duo offered. The closest suggestion I have seen since was the rumored iMac form factor which was a screen that allowed a stripped-down, MacBook Air-type notebook to be slid into the side of it, turning it into a full desktop. The current 24" LCD screen is not a bad solution, but does nothing for the MacBook Air, which would be the whole point in my estimation ... plus it is not big enough. Now this new tablet that is rumored to be coming ... that holds massive potential for a dockable Duo form factor. In fact I'd like to stuff that into a Duo case!I'll do anything necessary to have a Duo's plastics enfold ANY sized donor that'll kick some NetBook@$$, however "current cool" the design! I'd pick a retro-cool look over that ANY day of the week. ... The Duo/DuoDock/Mini/MicroDock system's factor is timeless!