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- IBM Makes the Big Announcement....Finally.
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- 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
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- 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
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- 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
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- 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. $????????
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- 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
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- - Page 1 -
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- 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.
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- - Page 2 -
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- -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.
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- Other new products:
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- 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.
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- 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.
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- - Page 3 -
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- 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
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