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NEWIBMS!.TXT
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1987-04-02
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11KB
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238 lines
IBM Makes the Big Announcement....Finally.
After two or three years of speculation users were finally
introduced to IBM's idea of the future of microcomputing...and I
think they may have a pretty good handle on it. They have
announced four new PCs in the "Personal System/2" line, as well
as a host of new products. I am not sure, but I believe this may
be the largest single group of announcements in IBM's history.
And the range of products is just as amazing! So here goes....
--IBM Personal System/2 Model 30
8086 based PC running at 8Mhz, 0 wait states, 640K of memory,
either 2-720K floppies or 1-720K floppy and a 20MB hard disk.
MCGA (part of the new graphics standard provided in all the new
machines and discussed later), three PC-compatible expansion
slots, serial, parallel, mouse port and clock.
OS: IBM DOS 3.3 Price: approx. $1,500.00
--IBM Personal System/2 Model 50
80286 10Mhz, 1MB RAM, expandable to 7MB, VGA (the new graphics
standard..discussed later), 1-1.4MB floppy, 20MB hard disk, three
expansion slots (new style), serial, parallel, mouse port, and
clock.
OS: IBM DOS 3.3, IBM OS/2 Price: approx. $3,500.00
--IBM Personal System/2 Model 60
80286 10Mhz, 1MB RAM, expandable to 15MB, VGA (the new graphics
standard..discussed later), 1-1.4MB floppy, 44MB or 70MB hard
disk (optional 115MB), seven expansion slots (new style), serial,
parallel, mouse port, and clock.
OS: IBM DOS 3.3, IBM OS/2 Price: approx. $5,000.00
--IBM Personal System/2 Model 80
80386 16Mhz, 1MB or 2MB 80ns RAM, expandable to 16MB, VGA (the
new graphics standard..discussed later), 1-1.4MB floppy, 44MB or
70MB hard disk (optional 115MB), seven expansion slots (new
style), serial, parallel, mouse port, and clock.
OS: IBM DOS 3.3, IBM OS/2 Price: approx. $????????
VGA (Video Gate Array) is the new IBM graphics standard
which is a superset of all standards previously introduced,
including monochrome, CGA and EGA, only with higher resolution.
In a nutshell, it is everything EGA is, complete with EGA
software compatibility, with PGA (Professional Graphics Adapter)
resolution. It is very impressive. Resolution on the VGA is
- Page 1 -
320x200 w/ 256 colors from a palette of 256,000, or 640x480 w/ 16
colors. Both are all point addressable. Text is displayed based
on 9x16 character box. With the Model 50 and above their is an
optional higher res graphics option available that plugs into a
special slot on the mother board. All the graphics are a 2-3x
speed improvement over similar graphics on a PC. There is a VGA
adapter available for use on standard PCs to make the compatible
with the new standard. Price should be about the same as EGA.
To go with this new standard are a line of analog (as
opposed to RGB) monitors, including a soft-white monochrome which
displays 64 shades of grey, a 14" Color, a 12" Color and a "16
Color designed for CAD/CAM type applications. The best news is
the monochrome is approx. $280 and the color is $420 (Don't ask
me which color. My preference is the 12" color.)
All present software that does not violate the rules IBM has
told all vendors to avoid violating runs like a charm. Everything
I have tried worked just fine. I watched Great Plains Accounting
software run as the Great Plains boys got their first look at the
machines and it screamed through them smooth as silk. They were
very impressed.
Other features of the system include battery backed up CMOS
that stores all the system parameters....no switches anywhere to
set. You can also program a password into the system so that it
will not boot without the password, a feature particularly nice
in a network environment. The 1.4MB floppies transfer data
significantly faster than the older 720K drives and are nice to
work with. The hard disks are all IBM made and feature a SDSI
interface which has a throughput four times greater than PC
systems we're used to. System throughput is supposed to be
significantly better than anything we have seen. The 8Mhz 8086
based Model 30 is said to equal the 8Mhz ATs. Those who have
used it today think it is twice as fast, but no benchmarks have
been run. Norton registers a 10.1 on the new system, but this
does not take into consideration the higher speed bus, which I
think should yield significantly higher performance in all
applications. Benchmarks will be available soon.
New DOS:
With the new systems come DOS 3.3. Along with general
tweaking over all new features include:
-FDISK now supports partitioning of large drives into
multiple volumes
-FASTOPEN command acts as a sort of caching of file handles
that are frequently opened
-DOS batch facility to create automatic procedure files
-CALL command for nested batch files
-APPEND command to allow tieing subdirectories together.
- Page 2 -
-BACKUP/RESTORE,DATE/TIME,ATTRIB and SYS improvements
-TopView support
-Better hard disk support for improved performance
-Support for 1.4 meg disks.
-Support of file transfers between machines using the
parallel printer port...transfers scream!
-Many more features
Also introduces was Operating System/2 (OS/2) which is IBMs
long awaited (and will continue to wait until Sept.) multitasking
operating system for the 80286 and 80386 systems. It will
address up to 16MB of memory. Supports any number of windows
running simultaneous applications. Comes in Standard and
Extended additions. Extended supports a built in relational
database manager that operates under Structured Query Language
(SQL) and ties in nicely with mainframe environments. It
maintains DOS compatibility, with improvements targeted in that
area before release. Menu driven system. Context sensitive
help.
Other new products:
Optical Disk--200M removable cartridge Write-Once, Read-Many
(WORM) disk drive. Cartridges are approx. $20. You can run up
to four controllers in a PC, with each controller handling two
drives, for a total of 8 drives for a total storage of 1600MB.
Access times are about twice the speed of floppies. Targeted for
large archival type storage needs.
External Tape Backup: 40 and 55 meg tape cartridge backup
system with SY-TOS tape operating system.
Quietwriter III: High quality print at speeds from 100-171
cps in LQ or 160-274 in draft mode. VERY quiet, very impressive.
Proprinter X24, XL24: 24 pin versions of the popular
Proprinter line. 240 cps draft, 80 cps LQ with four type fonts.
Proprinter II, XL: New models of the standard 9 pin
Proprinters with some new features.
Image Scanner: Allows scanning of graphics images.
Networks: Both the IBM broadband network and the IBM Token
Ring got some hardware and software boosts.
IBM PC Music Feature: Brings an incredible music
synthesizer capability to the PC, allowing the use of the PC to
study, play and compose music with your PC. Ties in with a MIDI
interface to hook keyboards, amplifiers, etc. to the system.
- Page 3 -
SolutionPacs: These are software packages bundled with
hardware for specific applications. The one I glanced at was for
their new desktop publishing system, which includes the software
and their new laser printer. I have been told that a Model 50, a
laser and the software package will go for under $7,000.
These are only a handful of the new products out of a stack
of Product Announcements that was almost 4" deep!! Easily 300
pages of documentation!! So what is the impact of all this on
the market? Who knows. It definitely puts IBM back in the
middle of the fray, and give corporate America a reason to look
back towards IBM when it is time to add more PCs. They are at a
price range that any serious business user has to give them
serious consideration for many reasons, not the least of which is
the comfort of those three little letters "I-B-M".
I also think it will spell the doom for some, not all, but
some of the clone makers....those that fall will be those that
deserve to fall because they aren't doing anything to support the
end user. It will place more price pressure on the clones who
have less to offer....and with the low production costs, the
prices of these new machines will come down. Don't be surprised
two years from now if you can pick up a Model 50 for $1,500.
Welcome back to the world of PCs, IBM! You've done a nice
job!
Loren D. Jones, Sysop
Fargo IBM PC Users Group RBBS
Modem: 701-293-5973
- Page 4 -