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Products, services, and subsidiaries have been offered from International Business Machines (IBM) Corporation and its predecessor corporations since the 1890s. [1] This list comprises those offerings and is eclectic; it includes, for example, the AN/FSQ-7, which was not a product in the sense of offered for sale, but was a product in the sense of manufactured—produced by the labor of IBM.
The original PS/2 line-up included the low-end PS/2 Model 30, the midrange PS/2 Model 50, the higher-end PS/2 Model 60, and the highest-end Model 80. [1] [2] All but the Model 80 were available to buy immediately that April; the first units of the PS/2 Model 80 were slated for a late 1987 release, [2] but owing to delays in shipping the Model ...
Explanatory notes. Built-in or optional monitors are CRTs unless mentioned otherwise.; The Space Saving Keyboard is a 87-key numpad-less version of the Model M. [1]The 25 Collegiate, intended for college students, had two 720 KB floppy drives, maxed out the RAM to 640 KB, and came packaged with the official PS/2 Mouse, Windows 2.0, and four blank floppy disks.
IBM announced the PS/2 Model 55 SX in May 1989, alongside the portable PS/2 Model P70. The Model 55 SX was IBM's first personal computer to use the 386SX processor by Intel, released almost a year earlier in June 1988. [2] [3] The 386SX was a cost-reduced version of the 32-bit 386 processor, also by Intel.
The Control-Vision (codenamed NEMO) [1] is an unreleased video game console developed by Tom Zito. It is notable for using VHS tapes rather than ROM cartridges , prompting the creation of game content which survived on into much more advanced CD-ROM platforms.
The Model 16 sold poorly at first and was reliant on existing Model II software early on. [9] In early 1983, Tandy switched from TRSDOS-16 to Xenix. [8] The Model 16 evolved into the Model 16B with 256 KB in July 1983, [10] and later the Tandy 6000, gaining an internal hard drive along the way and switching to an 8 MHz 68000. The 16B was the ...
The Personal System/2 Model 30 and Personal System/2 Model 30 286 are IBM's entry-level desktop computers in their Personal System/2 (PS/2) family of personal computers. As opposed to higher-end entries in the PS/2 line which use Micro Channel bus architecture, the Model 30 features an Industry Standard Architecture bus, allowing it to use expansion cards from its direct predecessors, the PC ...
The IBM Personal System/2 Model L40 SX (stylized as PS/2 Model L40 SX) [3] [4] is a laptop made by IBM as part of the IBM PS/2 series. [1] It was the successor to the IBM PC Convertible . [ 5 ] The "SX" in the name refers to its CPU, the Intel 80386SX .