This
is an IBM PC/AT (Advanced Technology) Model 5170 computer. It was at
the thrift store, and apparently came from the University of Arizona
Optical Sciences department (where my brothers worked around 1980). It
has an IBM EGA video card, here set to work with the standard IBM 5153
Color Display. I finally found an original IBM 5154 Enhanced Color
Display for it, not pictured here. The computer has an 8 mHz 80286
processor, running at 6 mHz, and the full capacity of 512 kbytes of
memory on the motherboard. It also has an IBM 30 mb hard disk, and the
original 5.25" high density floppy drive. Note that the original cover
is still there for the optional floppy drive, usually the cover was
thrown away when a 3.5" drive was added. There is the original IBM disk
drive controller board inside, this is an extra tall full length board,
as it controls both the floppy and hard drives. There is also a Paradise
I/O board, with one 9 pin RS-232 port and one parallel port. I added
some extra RAM on two BocaRam AT boards, including 128k of conventional,
and 3 Mb of extended memory. It has the original DOS 3.30 on it, and I
added Windows 1.01 just for fun.
[http://www.selectric.org/ibmpc/index.html 22/05/2012]
The
IBM RT (or PC/RT or 6150 in Europe) was a 32-bit RISC machine. In fact
'RT' meant 'RISC Technology' where RISC itself was initials of Reduced Instruction Set Computers. This machine was IBM's first try into the single-user workstation world and was the ancestor of the RS/6000 range.
The
advantages of RISC technology were smaller processor chips, since they
needed less on-chip storage for the instruction set, faster signal
transfer between devices, and faster instruction execution since the
reduced set was designed so that most instructions was executed in a
single clock cycle.
The RISC processor of the 6150 was called ROMP for Reshearch Office Products Division. Its study started in IBM Texas labs in 1977 and a prototype form ran in 1978
There
were two RT models, the floor-standing 6150 and the desktop 6151. The
differences between them lie in the positioning of some I/O ports and in
the storage options available. Despite processor incompatibility with
MS-DOS software, the 6150 could run PC software thanks to a PC expansion
card holding a Intel 80286 and designed to fit in one of the AT
compatible slots of the 6150. the motherboard featured four 32-bit
expansion slots to hold the ROMP board, an optional floating-point
accelerator board, and two 2 MB RAM boards; two 8-bit and six 16-bit PC
slots.
The 6150 operating system was called AIX for Advanced Interactive eXecutive.
It succeded to IBM OSes. In fact, it was just an Unix System V with
Berkeley 4.2 enhancements and IBM adds for the 6150 environment. Among
these adds, the VRM (Virtual Ressource Manager)
handled the interface between the Unix kernel and the specific 6150
harware it ran on. A DOS shell was also provided for MS-DOS
applications.
Nowadays,
one finds RISC processors mainly in numerous small devices like
PalmTops or mobile phones. Apple and IBM also use them today, the
biggest examples being the PowerPC 7455 (G4) and PowerPC G5 Processor,
mostly used in the Power Macintosh and Powerbook series of computers.
Many Proprietary Unix systems used them up until only a few years ago
(Sun, Silicon Graphics).
IBM 1401
was a variable wordlength decimal computer that was announced by IBM on
October 5, 1959. The first member of the highly successful IBM 1400
series, it was aimed at replacing electromechanical unit record
equipment for processing data stored on punched cards. Over 10,000 units
were produced and many were leased or resold in less developed
countries after they were replaced with newer technology. The 1401 was
withdrawn on February 8, 1971.
main memory 128-512 MB 30-100 million instruction per seconds } fourth generation
IBM 7094
monitor/batch operating system minicomputer vacuum tube cycle time of 2 micro sec and 32 k of 36-bit word of core memory Last ENIAC time sharing/conversational
second generation IBM 1620 ซึ่งติดตั้งที่คณะพาณิชยศาสตร์และการบัญชี จุฬาลงกรณมหาวิทยาลัย
1959 "Model T of Business Computers," first
mass-produced digital, all-transistorized, affordable business
computer. The machine was about 5 feet high and 3 feet across. It came
with 4,096 characters of memory [6-bit (plus 1 parity bit] CORE memory,
constructed from little donut shaped metal rings strung on a wire mesh.
it
handled 23-decimal-place numbers (words) and could perform all four
arithmetic operations; moreover, it had special built-in programs, or
subroutines, to handle logarithms and trigonometric functions. it was
originally controlled from pre-punched paper tape without provision for
reversal, so that automatic "transfer of control" instructions could not
be programmed. Output was by card punch and electric
typewriter.rotating counter wheels as key components in addition to
electromagnetic relays, the machine was classified as a relay computer.
It was slow, requiring 3 to 5 seconds for a multiplication, but it was
fully automatic and could complete long computations without human
intervention.
magetic drum storage device 2 k word consist of 10 digits + sign
1959 IBM 7030 is a minicomputer as the second generation computer. <<<<< where is the photo ? 1962 IBM 7090 is a vacuum tube as the second generation computer