The 770Z was the top-of-the-line IBM ThinkPad laptop from 1999. It offered several features that were absolutely unheard of at that time in a laptop, such as a DVD Player, 1280×1024 screen resolution, and 10 hours of battery life. The catch, of course, was the cost: Its STARTING price was no less than $4,799 USD, which would be roughly $6,900 in 2015. If you add the options I mentioned above (including a second battery), you’d be looking at the equivalent of at least $8,000 today. I’m fairly certain nobody would spend that much for a laptop today (except perhaps on the MSI Titan.)

I set out to find one of these rare birds with a DVD Drive and 1280×1024 screen, and was successful!

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At first glance, this laptop may look extremely bulky, and appear to be about the size of a small car. However, I was also able to get, new-in-box, a Select-A-Dock III and Select-A-Base 770Z to go with the laptop. This is what you see below the laptop.

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Below is a close-up of the keyboard, showing a ridiculous 11-hour battery life (8 hours and 20 minutes while playing Quake). The 11-hour figure is with the brightness turned all the way down, of course, since this is the era of Fluorescent backlights and not LED. Note that there is a slider for brightness control on this laptop (and a rotating knob for the volume control). This means you don’t have to take your eyes off the screen to adjust either brightness or volume.

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Needless to say, if you want to use the DVD Player functionality, you would have to remove the battery on the right and put the DVD Drive in its place:

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This is a very bulky laptop, even when it’s not docked. And it’s all rubberized paint – top, bottom, and palmrest – which makes it extremely comfortable to handle.

The keyboard itself is a treat to type on. They clearly made this with quality in mind, which obviously explains the high price tag.

And here are some more shots of the laptop on the dock, with it running. You can see the 1280×1024 resolution here!

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Category: IBM

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3 Responses to IBM ThinkPad 770Z

  1. mrandersen10 says:

    Hi. Awesome laptop you got there! I’ve always wanted to a 770Z in my collection, but I’ve found them next impossible to find. It’s actually the ONLY thinkpad I cannot find. Where did you score yours? Is there another source you’d recommend besides ebay? That select-a-base is also great! Why is it so huge? What is its purpose? Thanks!

  2. Ross Carlson says:

    For some reason the 770Z popped into my head today so I thought I’d see if I could find some old pictures. Little did I know I would not only find pictures but this write up reminding me of this beasts features and cost. In 1999 I worked for Bell South (became Singular then AT&T) and was tasked with testing the 770Z. I used it for about a month then put together a presentation for IT senior management with a recommendation for it’s use (or against). Ultimately my recommendation was no as it was simply to big, heavy and too expensive. The review unit I had went to the CTO as, like most IT guys, he wanted the biggest and baddest. I’d forgotten how long the battery life was supposed to be, I remember I couldn’t get through an entire DVD movie at full brightness without the battery going. It was also the first DVD player I ever used, it was actually a bit tough to find some DVD movies to test with it, well good movies anyway.

  3. John S. Branco says:

    Hello Jack. I am looking for an IBM ThinkPad 770 Z with a 13.7 inch display to complement my ThinkPad 701C and 770 ED which I’ve owned since new. If you’re ever interested in parting with your 770Z please let me know. I would be very interested in purchasing it from you. Thank you.

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