Steve Jobs introduced the first MacBook Pro 16 years ago

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In one moment on January 10, 2006, Steve Jobs said Apple was through with the hit PowerBooks. So, instead, he unveiled the first MacBook Pro with Intel inside.




The PowerBook had been a huge success for Apple from the day the first models were released on October 21, 1991. But the entire range died 14 years, 2 months, and 20 days later as Steve Jobs killed off the PowerBook and replaced it with the MacBook Pro.

It's now 16 years years since he did that, which means we've had the MacBook Pro for longer than Apple's original portables. And where the MacBook Pro was then introduced during the changeover from PowerPC to Intel processors, today the MacBook Pro is a key part of the change from Intel to Apple Silicon.

"It's because we're kind of done with 'power'," said Jobs on stage at Macworld, "and because we want Mac in the name of our products."

If you were a Mac user in 2006, it was hard not to be excited at the promised performance improvements, but impossible not to be sorry the name PowerBook was gone.

That changed over time, of course, but it may have taken longer than it might. It was not until the updated Intel Core 2 Duo models in October 2006 that it felt as if the MacBook Pro was a hit.




The name change did seem to amplify just how big a difference there was between the last PowerBook G4 and the first Intel Core Duo MacBook Pro. It perhaps also hid how the PowerBook range had launched while Steve Jobs was gone.

Jobs had been back at Apple for almost a decade, so it's not as if it were really some petulant desire to stamp his mark on things. Still, tight from the start of the Macintosh, he'd pressed for what he called "Mac in a book," and now he got it.

What you got

There was just one MacBook Pro launched on that day, and Jobs inevitably spent a long time stressing just how much better it was than its predecessor. But he also spent quite a while explaining why this new machine was part of the reason Apple was moving to Intel.

"There's been this pesky little problem on the PowerBooks," he said. "It's not a secret that we've been trying to shoe-horn a G5 into the PowerBook and have been unable to do so because of its power consumption being unrealistic in such a small package."

"We've done everything that was possible engineering-wise," he continued. Showing an image of the Catholic Pope, he added: "We've consulted every possible high authority."

Just as Tim Cook and Craig Federighi would do with the move to Apple Silicon, Jobs emphasized that the issue was the balance between performance power and battery life. According to Jobs, a G5 proved to be a worse option than a G4 because of this balance.

And the Intel Core Duo was, indeed, dramatically better. And it was only a start for the much better Core 2 Duo that came later.

"This is hard to believe, but this is what the numbers tell us," said Jobs. "Four to five times faster than the PowerBook G4. These things are screamers."

The one MacBook Pro had a 15.4-inch screen, which Jobs said was as bright as Apple's then-current Cinema Display, and it came in two configurations. For $1,999, you got:

  • 1.67 GHz Intel Core Duo

  • Built-in iSight camera

  • 512MB RAM

  • 80GB SATA hard drive

  • 4x SuperDrive

  • ATI Radeon X1600

  • Airport Extreme & Bluetooth

  • ExpressCard Slot

  • MagSafe power connector

For $2,499, you got a faster 1.83 GHz Intel Core Duo, plus 1GB RAM, and 100GB hard drive storage, "for those folks that need a little more."

From Apple's original MacBook Pro site
From Apple's original MacBook Pro site


In today's money, that would make the entry-level configuration approximately $2,756. And the higher specification model was what would today be around $3,445.

Video conferencing on the go

Jobs could not have imagined how much the world would be using video conferencing 15 and 16 years after the launch of the MacBook Pro. But he did recognize how the new built-in iSight camera would be a boon, and it did get applause at the event.

"So now you can have video conferencing right out of the box, and on the go," he said. "It's great for those of you that ever carried an iSight camera with you with a PowerBook, boy this is this is heaven."

It wasn't the most high-resolution webcam at 640 by 480 pixels, and arguably Apple still underperforms in this line, but building it in to the MacBook Pro was a big step.

Additions and subtractions

This first MacBook Pro also added an IR sensor in the front, beside the latch to open the case. Apple included a remote control which, together with the sensor, meant users could use Apple's Front Row software for playing back video and audio.

You probably never used Front Row on your MacBook Pro. If the name "PowerBook" is still fondly remembered, Front Row isn't much at all.

And as Apple gave us more performance with one hand, it also took away some convenience. The new MacBook Pro lacked the FireWire 800 port of the PowerBook for one thing, while the SuperDrive dropped support for dual-layer DVD+R media.

At this distance, the 80GB and 100GB hard drive sizes seem like typing mistakes, they were also even smaller than users could get with the previous PowerBook.

Steve Jobs and Phil Schiller in the first video conference using the MacBook Pro's built-in camera
Steve Jobs and Phil Schiller in the first video conference using the MacBook Pro's built-in camera

How far we've come

"So the new MacBook Pro is the fastest Mac notebook ever, obviously," said Jobs. "It's also the thinnest. It's an inch thin and it's even a hair thinner than the 17-inch PowerBook."

The full dimensions were 1.0 inches by 14.1 inches by 9.6 inches, and it weighed 5.6lbs. The screen's maximum resolution was 1,440 by 900 pixels.

Its 15.4-inch display means it sat right between today's 14-inch MacBook Pro and 16-inch MacBook Pro for screen size. It was, though, the top of the range -- at least while there was only one MacBook Pro -- so the most useful comparison is with the 16-inch Apple Silicon MacBook Pro.

That actually has a 16.2-inch display. Its maximum resolution is 3,456 by 2,234 pixels.

As for physical dimensions, the current 16-inch MacBook Pro is 0.66 inches by a slightly slimmer 14.01 inches, and a slightly greater depth of 9.77 inches. It weighs 4.8lbs with the M1 Max processor.

Speaking of processors, it's not truly possible to compare such different chips, but both the 2006 and 2021 MacBook Pro are "screamers." Where Jobs championed that every MacBook Pro would have dual processors, the fewest you can get in today's machine is 10 CPU cores and 16 GPU cores.

Plus the minimum RAM is now 16GB, and the minimum storage is 512GB SSD.

The legacy of the MacBook Pro

It is still easy to be nostalgic for the PowerBook name, but that nostalgia tends to obscure how the original laptop range had as many misses as hits. There were recalls, there were overheating PowerBooks.

The MacBook Pro has hardly been free of the same issues.

Yet sixteen years ago, Jobs and Apple did genuinely make a big leap in performance, and a big leap in usability for Mac users on the go.

Then if it seemed as if the MacBook Pro took a few wrong turns -- such as dropping MagSafe, adding unreliable keyboards -- today it's back to its roots and again making huge leaps.

Read on AppleInsider

Comments

  • Reply 1 of 11
    blastdoorblastdoor Posts: 3,290member
    It was a historical coincidence that 'Power' was used both for 'PowerBook' and 'PowerPC' (the original PowerBooks used 68k processors). 

    I still think 'MacBook' is a dumb name -- 'PowerBook' and 'iBook' were better names. 

    It would be kind of cool if, with the move to ASi, Apple were to do a top-to-bottom rethink on Mac naming. Doesn't look like that's in the cards, though. 
    williamlondon
  • Reply 2 of 11
    Apple's "original portable" was the Portable, which was not a particularly accurate name, given its ~ 16 lb. weight. If you were schlepping around an additional land anchor, er, battery, it was close to 20 lb. We were relieved when the first PowerBook 1xx's were released two years later: 9 lb. lighter.
    watto_cobra
  • Reply 3 of 11
    blastdoorblastdoor Posts: 3,290member
    sunman42 said:
    Apple's "original portable" was the Portable, which was not a particularly accurate name, given its ~ 16 lb. weight. If you were schlepping around an additional land anchor, er, battery, it was close to 20 lb. We were relieved when the first PowerBook 1xx's were released two years later: 9 lb. lighter.
    I have a fond memory of the portable, though — it was the first Mac on which I played sim city 
    watto_cobra
  • Reply 4 of 11
    Front Row (2005) begat Apple TV (2007), which quite a few people have used; just not on their MacBooks.
    watto_cobra
  • Reply 5 of 11
    XedXed Posts: 2,559member
    blastdoor said:
    It was a historical coincidence that 'Power' was used both for 'PowerBook' and 'PowerPC' (the original PowerBooks used 68k processors). 

    I still think 'MacBook' is a dumb name -- 'PowerBook' and 'iBook' were better names. 

    It would be kind of cool if, with the move to ASi, Apple were to do a top-to-bottom rethink on Mac naming. Doesn't look like that's in the cards, though. 
    Calling a Mac notebook a MacBook sounds reasonable to me. I was never fan of the iNaming convention.
    shareef777StrangeDayswatto_cobra
  • Reply 6 of 11
    XedXed Posts: 2,559member
    narwhal said:
    Front Row (2005) begat Apple TV (2007), which quite a few people have used; just not on their MacBooks.
    On the original Apple TV that used macOS, I think the re-tooled FrontRow app as the UI was called BackRow.
    williamlondonwatto_cobra
  • Reply 7 of 11
    leighrleighr Posts: 254member
    blastdoor said:

    I still think 'MacBook' is a dumb name -- 'PowerBook' and 'iBook' were better names. 
    “PowerBook” is too generic, and hard to protect as a brand. At least MacBook say exactly what it is, and keeps the Mac brand in the forefront. That said, the naming conventions are interesting. Typically more, the iNames are for the iOS devices (iPad, iPhone) MacBook is for portable running macOS but then iMac, is kind of a hybrid name, and likewise MacPro. And of course AppleTV is different again. Perhaps they should be ApplePhone, AppleBook, ApplePad, ApplePro, AppleTV, ApplePods!  Maybe not. It certainly is a mixture of iNames, Pro’s, Mac, Power, Air, and Pods, but perhaps that’s not really a problem!
    StrangeDayswatto_cobra
  • Reply 8 of 11
    mcdavemcdave Posts: 1,927member
    Apple peaked too early with multi-way video conferencing.
    williamlondoncorp1watto_cobra
  • Reply 9 of 11
    saareksaarek Posts: 1,523member
    I used front row quite a bit, albeit it was on the iMac as opposed to a MacBook.

    Put me in the camp that misses the PowerBook moniker. I’m sure it’s my nostalgic feelings, but I remember to this day sitting down with my PowerBook G4, the name was just so cool to a 19 year old and I couldn’t help but feel smug next to the guys with their Dell 1369’s (or whatever dumb number it was back then)!
    edited January 2022 watto_cobra
  • Reply 10 of 11
    elijahgelijahg Posts: 2,759member
    blastdoor said:
    It was a historical coincidence that 'Power' was used both for 'PowerBook' and 'PowerPC' (the original PowerBooks used 68k processors). 

    I still think 'MacBook' is a dumb name -- 'PowerBook' and 'iBook' were better names. 

    It would be kind of cool if, with the move to ASi, Apple were to do a top-to-bottom rethink on Mac naming. Doesn't look like that's in the cards, though. 
    I don't have a problem with Mac naming, but AppleTV naming is terrible. No one knows the difference between AppleTV, AppleTV, AppleTV channel and AppleTV+. No I didn't accidentally write AppleTV twice, since there's two products with identical names. That being the AppleTV box and the AppleTV app (possibly on the AppleTV). But also the AppleTV channel within the AppleTV app (possibly on the AppleTV) and the AppleTV+ subscription. It's a naming disaster, whoever came up with that should be fired.
    Xed
  • Reply 11 of 11
    mcdave said:
    Apple peaked too early with multi-way video conferencing.
    Only 14 years too early...  :)

    Though now we finally have cross-platform FaceTime, but via a web app rather than the promised "open industry standard" that Jobs promised in 2010.

    (Open FaceTime may have been torpedoed by Apple's unfortunate loss of a patent lawsuit from non-practicing entity VirnetX; this required Apple to change the way FaceTime worked.)




    edited January 2022 watto_cobra
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