Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
This model was equipped with mobile implementation of Pentium 4 CPU, [3] and high power consumption of Intel chip was a reasonable point for designing this model as the heaviest and most bulky T series ThinkPad of IBM era. ThinkPad T30 was the last classic ThinkPad with a battery with bottom placement, was the first 14.1" ThinkPad with 1400 × ...
IBM Personal Computer models Type IBM P/N Date announced Date withdrawn Bus No. of slots No. of bays Processor Clock speed (MHz) Stock onboard RAM (KB) Maximum onboard RAM (KB) FDD HDD Notes Ref(s). Personal Computer: 5150-001 August 1981: March 1983: ISA, 8-bit 5 2 Intel 8088: 4.77 16 KB 64 KB none none
Their Pentium M Dothan features the XD bit, making it the first ThinkPad that could run Windows 8.1 and Windows 10. In December 2004 Lenovo announced the acquisition of the IBM PC division [14] including the ThinkPad brand (at the time, 40% of the PC division was working in China.) ThinkPads were being made by Lenovo's arch-rival Great Wall ...
The IBM ThinkPad T20 series was a series of notebook computers introduced in May 2000 by IBM as the successor of the 770 series and the first model of the T-series which exists today under Lenovo ownership. Four models were produced, the T20, T21, T22, and T23; [1] the series was succeeded in May 2002 by the ThinkPad T30, but was produced until ...
The family comprised the Intel Inboard 386/AT and Intel Inboard 386/PC, which allowed users to upgrade an IBM AT or an IBM PC (or compatible) respectively. The boards allowed users to upgrade their machines' CPU to a 16 MHz 80386 processor. Both variants utilized a ribbon cable which plugged into the computer's original CPU socket on one end ...
Memory Bus 32 bit 32 bit 32 bit 64 bit 64 bit 64 bit Maximum Memory 80 MB 48 MB 48 MB 96 MB 96 MB 96 MB Display 10.4" 640 × 480: 10.4" 640 × 480 or 800 × 600: 10.4" 640 × 480 or 800 × 600: 10.4" 640 × 480 or 800 × 600: 10.4" 640 × 480 or 800 × 600: 12.1" 1024 × 768: Video Capture built-in optional
The spread of the x86-64 architecture has further distanced current computers' and operating systems' internal similarity with the original IBM PC by introducing yet another processor mode with an instruction set modified for 64-bit addressing, but x86-64 capable processors also retain standard x86 compatibility.
P/390 was the designation used for the expansion card used in an IBM PC Server and was less expensive than the R/390. The original P/390 server was housed in an IBM PC Server 500 and featured a 90 MHz Intel Pentium processor for running OS/2. The model was revised in mid-1996 and rebranded as the PC Server 520, which featured a 133 MHz Intel ...