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 was the 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
240
240X
240Z
i-Series 1124
CPU
Celeron 300, 366 or 400 MHz
Celeron 450 MHz or Pentium III 500 MHz
Celeron 500 MHz or Pentium III 600 MHz
Celeron 450 or 500 MHz, or Pentium III 500 MHz
RAM
96MB, max. 320MB SDRAM SODIMM (PC-66)
64 MB or 128 MB (soldered), + 32MB, 64MB or 128MB SDRAM SODIMM (PC-100)
Graphics chip
Neomagic MagicGraph128XD with 2MB
SMI LynxEM+ with 2MB
SMI LynxEM+ with 2MB (SVGA-model) or SMI LynxEM4+ SM712 with 4MB (XGA-model)
Display
10.4" TFT Display with 800x600, max. 24-bit colordepth (SVGA)
10.4" TFT Display with 800x600 (SVGA) or 1024x768 (XGA), max. 24-bit colordepth
Disksize
6GB or 12GB
12GB
10GB or 20GB
Operating system
Microsoft Windows 98 or NT 4.0
Windows 98 SE or Windows 2000
Reception
Joseph Leung from the South China Morning Post in December 1999 appreciated the compactness and portability of the ThinkPad 240. It also noted the short battery life and that it only has a single Type II PC Card slot.[2] Peter H. Lewis from The New York Times noted that it is a niche product for people who travel a lot.[3]
Transmeta Crusoe
At the June 2000 PC Expo in New York, IBM demonstrated a ThinkPad 240 with a Transmeta Crusoe.[4][5] In November, it was announced that IBM would not be using the Transmeta CPU in a 240.[6] According to a source close to Transmeta, this was due to pressure from Intel.[7]