The Pedion was a subnotebook computer developed by Mitsubishi Electric with Hewlett-Packard in 1998. [1] [2] At 0.7244 inches (1.84 cm) thick, it was the thinnest notebook computer in the world, even thinner than the " MacBook Air" (although the Apple equivalent was 4 mm at its thinnest point), released nearly ten years later. The notebook included a Pentium 233 MMX processor, 64 MB RAM, and a 1 GB Hard disk. [3]
The Greek word, pedion (πεδίον) means "plain", "flat", "field".
Mitsubishi ceased production and withdrew the notebook from the market due to "mechanical problems". [1]
The Pedion was a subnotebook computer developed by Mitsubishi Electric with Hewlett-Packard in 1998. [1] [2] At 0.7244 inches (1.84 cm) thick, it was the thinnest notebook computer in the world, even thinner than the " MacBook Air" (although the Apple equivalent was 4 mm at its thinnest point), released nearly ten years later. The notebook included a Pentium 233 MMX processor, 64 MB RAM, and a 1 GB Hard disk. [3]
The Greek word, pedion (πεδίον) means "plain", "flat", "field".
Mitsubishi ceased production and withdrew the notebook from the market due to "mechanical problems". [1]