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IBM Personal Computer - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

IBM Personal Computer

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This article discusses to the original IBM PC. For IBM-like PCs in general ("clones"), see IBM PC compatible. For the generic meaning of "personal computer", see personal computer. For the second generation of microcomputers released from the late-1970s to the mid-1980s, see home computer.
IBM PC (model 5150)
Type Personal computer
Released August 12, 1981
Discontinued April 2, 1987
Processor Intel 8088 @ 4.77 MHz
Memory 16KB ~ 640KB
OS IBM BASIC / PC-DOS 1.0

The IBM Personal Computer, commonly known as the IBM PC, was the original version and progenitor of the IBM PC compatible hardware platform. It was IBM model number 5150, and was introduced on August 12, 1981. It was created by a team of engineers and designers under the direction of Don Estridge of the IBM Entry Systems Division in Boca Raton, Florida.

The term "personal computer" was common currency before 1981, and was used as early as 1972 to characterize Xerox PARC's Alto. However, because of the success of the IBM PC, what had been a generic term came to mean specifically a microcomputer compatible with IBM's specification.

During the second quarter of 2005, the Chinese Lenovo Group secured the rights to produce IBM-branded personal computers. This move reflects IBM's present focus on server/mainframe markets and business consulting and information technology services.

Contents

[edit] The IBM PC concept

The original PC was an IBM attempt to get into the home computer market then dominated by the Apple II and a host of CP/M machines.

Rather than going through the usual IBM design process, which had already failed to design an affordable microcomputer (the unsuccessful IBM 5100), a special team was assembled with authorization to bypass normal company restrictions and get something to market rapidly. This project was given the code name Project Chess.

The team consisted of just twelve people headed by Don Estridge. They succeeded in developing the PC in about a year. To achieve this they first decided to build the machine with "off-the-shelf" parts from a variety of different original equipment manufacturers (OEMs) and countries. Previously IBM had developed their own components. Second, they decided on an open architecture so that other manufacturers could produce and sell peripheral components and compatible software. The ROM BIOS source code was published. IBM did not anticipate that its competitors would find ways to legally duplicate the entire system.

At the time, Don Estridge and his team considered using the 801 processor and its operating system that had been developed at the IBM research laboratory in Yorktown Heights, New York (The 801 was an early RISC microprocessor designed by John Cocke and his team at Yorktown Heights.) The 801 was at least an order of magnitude more powerful than the Intel 8088, and the operating system many years more advanced than the DOS operating system from Microsoft, that were finally selected. Ruling out an in-house solution made the team’s job much easier and may have avoided a delay in the schedule, but the ultimate consequences of this decision for IBM were far-reaching.

Other manufacturers soon reverse engineered the BIOS to produce their own non-infringing functional copies. Columbia Data Products introduced the first IBM-PC compatible computer in June 1982. Compaq Computer Corporation announced the Compaq Portable, the first portable IBM PC compatible in November 1982 (it did not ship until March 1983).

Once the IBM PC became a commercial success the PC came back under the usual IBM management control, with the result that competitors had little trouble taking the lead from them. (In this regard, IBM's tradition of "rationalizing" their product lines—deliberately restricting the performance of lower-priced models in order to prevent them from "cannibalizing" profits from higher-priced models—worked against them).

[edit] Third-party distribution channels

Sears Roebuck and Computerland executives were involved with the IBM team from the start. The IBMers - especially H.L. ('sparky') Sparks, who was in charge of sales and marketing - relied on them for much of their knowledge of the marketplace. In turn, almost by default, they were to become the main outlets for the new product. Sears Roebuck would set up a handful of centers and, most important, the more than 190 stores of Computerland already existed. From IBM's point of view, this meant that even at announcement there would be immediate widespread distribution across the US. In the event, Sears Roebuck failed to live up to expectations, when the new PC turned out to be selling to the office market rather than the home - where it had originally been targeted.

The use of outside organisations ('third parties' in IBM terminology) to sell IBM's products did not stop with the PC; for the whole of IBM's business had gradually evolved to the state where it was selling ever larger numbers of ever cheaper 'boxes'. The only way that IBM felt - at that time - it could, in general, handle the numbers of these new customers was by handing over the lower end of its business to 'retailers'; an approach that many other companies had successfully adopted in the past - from the producers of groceries (whose experience may not all have been totally relevant, though their experience of advertising to large numbers of end users might have been) to the manufacturers of cars (most of whose experiences, from handling their dealers to advertising on the large scale, might have been very relevant indeed). Certainly, by the end of the 1990s, more PCs were being sold worldwide than cars or even TVs.

[edit] IBM PC models

The models of IBM's first-generation Personal Computer (PC) series have names:

A release photo of the original IBM PC (ca. 1981).
Enlarge
A release photo of the original IBM PC (ca. 1981).
  • The original PC had a version of Microsoft BASICIBM Cassette BASIC— in ROM. The CGA (Color Graphics Adapter) video card could use a standard television for display, or MDA adapter and monochrome display model 5151. The standard storage device was cassette tape. A floppy disk drive was an optional extra; no hard disk was available. It had only five expansion slots; maximum memory using IBM parts was 256 kB, 64 kB on the main board and three 64 kB expansion cards. The processor was an Intel 8088 (early 1978 version, later were 1978/81/2 versions of intel chip, second-sourced AMDs were used after 1983) running at 4.77 MHz, which could be replaced with a NEC V20 for a slight increase in processing speed. An Intel 8087 co-processor could also be added for enhanced mathematical processing power. IBM sold it in configurations with 16 kB or 64 kB of RAM preinstalled using either 9 or 36, 16 kbit DRAM chips. The IBM 5161 Expansion Chassis was eventually released that allowed for more expansion boards to be installed as well as additional hard drives.
  • The original PC proved too expensive for the home market, but was an unexpectedly large success with businesses. The "IBM Personal Computer XT" was an enhanced machine designed for business use. It had 8 expansion slots and a 10 megabyte hard disk. It could take 256 kB of memory on the main board (when 64 kbit DRAM was introduced); later models were expandable to 640 kB. (The 384 kB of BIOS ROM + video RAM space filled the rest of the one megabyte address space of the 8088 CPU.) It was usually sold with a Monochrome Display Adapter (MDA) video card. The processor was still a 4.77 MHz Intel 8088 and the expansion bus still 8-bit Industry Standard Architecture (ISA) with XT bus architecture.
  • The "IBM Personal Computer/AT", announced August 1984, used an Intel 80286 processor, originally at 6 MHz. It had a 16-bit ISA bus and 20 MB hard drive. A faster model, running at 8 MHz, was introduced in 1986. IBM made some attempt at marketing it as a multi-user machine, but it sold mainly as a faster PC for power users. Early PC/ATs were plagued with reliability problems, in part because of some software and hardware incompatibilities, but mostly related to the internal 20 MB hard disk. While some people blamed IBM's hard disk controller card and others blamed the hard disk manufacturer Computer Memories Inc. (CMI), the IBM controller card worked fine with other drives, including CMI's 33-megabyte model. The problems introduced doubt about the computer and, for a while, even about the 286 architecture in general, but after IBM replaced the 20 MB CMI drives, the PC/AT proved reliable and became a lasting industry standard.

The second generation IBM Personal System/2 (PS/2), are known by model number: Model 25, Model 30. Within each series, the models are also commonly referenced by their CPU clock rate.

All IBM personal computers are software compatible with each other in general, but not every program will work in every machine. Some programs are time sensitive to a particular speed class. Older programs will not take advantage of newer higher-resolution display standards.

[edit] Technology

[edit] Electronics

The main circuit board in an IBM PC is called the motherboard. This carries the CPU and memory, and has a bus with slots for expansion cards.

The bus used in the original PC became very popular, and was subsequently named ISA. It is in use to this day in computers for industrial use. Later, requirements for higher speed and more capacity forced the development of new versions. IBM introduced the MCA bus with the PS/2 line. The VESA Local Bus allowed for up to three, much faster 32-bit cards, and the EISA architecture was developed as a backward compatible standard including 32-bit card slots, but it only sold well in high-end server systems. The lower-cost and more general PCI bus was introduced in 1994 and has now become ubiquitous.

The motherboard is connected by cables to internal storage devices such as hard disks, floppy disks and CD-ROM drives. These tend to be made in standard sizes, such as 3.5" (90 mm) and 5.25" (133.4 mm) widths, with standard fixing holes. The case also contains a standard power supply unit (PSU) which is either an AT or ATX standard size.

Intel 8086 and 8088-based PCs require EMS (expanded memory) boards to work with more than one megabyte of memory. The original IBM PC AT used an Intel 80286 processor which can access up to 16 megabytes of memory (though standard DOS applications cannot use more than one megabyte without using additional APIs.) Intel 80286-based computers running under OS/2 can work with the maximum memory.

[edit] Keyboard

The original 1981 IBM PC's keyboard at the time was an extremely reliable and high quality keyboard originally developed in North Carolina for another $10,000 IBM computer system that had been canceled. Each key was rated to be reliable to over 100 million keystrokes. Compared to the keyboards of other small computers at the time, the IBM PC keyboard was the Rolls-Royce of its time and played a significant role in establishing a high quality impression. Byte magazine in the fall of 1981 went so far as to state that the keyboard was 50% of the reason to buy an IBM PC. The importance of the keyboard was definitely established when the IBM PC Junior flopped, in very large part for having a much different and mediocre keyboard that made a poor impression on customers. Oddly enough, the same thing almost happened to the IBM PC when in early 1981 management seriously considered substituting a cheaper but lower quality keyboard. But this mistake was narrowly avoided by the advice of one of the original development engineers.

However, the original 1981 IBM PC's keyboard was severely criticised by typists for its non-standard placement of the return and left shift keys. In 1984, IBM corrected this on its AT keyboard, but shortened the backspace key, making it harder to reach. In 1987, it introduced the enhanced keyboard, which relocated all the function keys and the Ctrl keys. The Esc key was also relocated to the opposite side of the keyboard.

An "IBM PC compatible" may have a keyboard which does not recognize every key combination a true IBM PC does, e.g., shifted cursor keys. In addition, the "compatible" vendors sometimes used proprietary keyboard interfaces, preventing the keyboard from being replaced.

See also: Keyboard layout

[edit] Character set

The original IBM PC used the 7-bit ASCII alphabet as its basis, but extended it to 8 bits with nonstandard character codes. This character set was not suitable for some international applications, and soon a veritable cottage industry emerged providing variants of the original character set in various national variants. In IBM tradition, these variants were called code pages. These codings are now obsolete, having been replaced by more systematic and standardized forms of character coding, such as ISO 8859-1, Windows-1251 and Unicode.

This was the original IBM PC character set:

-0 -1 -2 -3 -4 -5 -6 -7 -8 -9 -A -B -C -D -E -F
0- 0-
1- § 1-
2- ! " # $ % & ' ( ) * + , - . / 2-
3- 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 : ; < = > ? 3-
4- @ A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O 4-
5- P Q R S T U V W X Y Z [ \ ] ^ _ 5-
6- ` a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o 6-
7- p q r s t u v w x y z { } ~ 7-
8- Ç ü é â ä à å ç ê ë è ï î ì Ä Å 8-
9- É æ Æ ô ö ò û ù ÿ Ö Ü ¢ £ ¥ ƒ 9-
A- á í ó ú ñ Ñ ª º ¿ ¬ ½ ¼ ¡ « » A-
B- B-
C- C-
D- D-
E- α ß Γ π Σ σ µ τ Φ Θ Ω δ φ ε E-
F- ± ÷ ° · ² F-
-0 -1 -2 -3 -4 -5 -6 -7 -8 -9 -A -B -C -D -E -F
For more details on this topic, see Code page 437.

[edit] Storage media

Officially, the standard storage medium for the original IBM PC model 5150 was a cassette drive. Technologically obsolete even by 1981 standards, it was seldom used, and few (if any) IBM PCs left the factory without a floppy disk drive installed. The 1981 PC had one or two 160 kilobyte 5¼ inch single-sided double-density floppy disk drives; XTs generally had one double-sided 360 kB drive (next to the hard disk).

The first IBM PC that included a fixed, non-removable, hard disk was the XT. Hard disks for IBM compatibles soon became available with very large storage capacities. If a hard disk was added that was not compatible with the existing disk controller, a new controller board had to be plugged in; some disks were integrated with their controller in a single expansion board, commonly called a "Hard Card."

In 1984, IBM introduced the 1.2 megabyte dual sided floppy disk along with its AT model. Although often used as backup storage, the high density floppy was not often used for interchangeability. In 1986, IBM introduced the 720 kB double density 3.5" microfloppy disk on its Convertible laptop computer. It introduced the 1.44 MB high density version with the PS/2 line. These disk drives could be added to existing older model PCs. In 1988 IBM introduced a drive for 2.88 MB "DSED" diskettes in its top-of-the-line models; it was an instant failure and is all but forgotten today (but survives as a possible "size" choice in disk-formatting utilities).

[edit] Original Software

All IBM PCs include a relatively small piece of software stored in ROM. The original IBM PC 40 kB ROM included 8 kB for power-on self-test (POST) and basic input/output system (BIOS) functions plus 32 kB BASIC in ROM (Cassette BASIC). The ROM BASIC interpreter was the default user interface if no DOS boot disk was present. BASICA was distributed on floppy disk and provided a way to run the ROM BASIC under PC-DOS control.

[edit] IBM PC and PS/2 models

The IBM PC range:
Model name Introduced CPU Features
PC Aug 1981 8088 Floppy disk system
XT Mar 1983 8088 Slow hard disk
XT/370 Oct 1983 8088 System/370 mainframe emulation
3270 PC Oct 1983 8088 With 3270 terminal emulation
PCjr Nov 1983 8088 Floppy-based home computer
PC Portable Feb 1984 8088 Floppy-based portable
AT Aug 1984 80286 Medium-speed hard disk
Convertible Apr 1986 8088 Microfloppy laptop portable
XT 286 Sep 1986 80286 Slow hard disk, but zero wait state memory on the motherboard. This 6 MHz machine was actually faster than the 8 MHz ATs (when using planar memory) because of the zero wait states


The PS/2 series:
Model Introduced CPU Features
25 August 1987 8086 PC bus (limited expansion)
30 April 1987 8086 PC bus
30 August 1987 80286 PC bus
50 April 1987 80286 Micro Channel Architecture bus
50Z June 1988 80286 Faster Model 50
55 SX May 1989 80386SX MCA bus
60 April 1987 80286 MCA bus
70 June 1988 80386 Desktop, MCA bus
P70 May 1989 80386 Portable, MCA bus
80 April 1987 80386 Tower, MCA bus


IBM PC compatible specifications:
CPU Clock
speed
(MHz)
CPU
bus
width (bits)
System
Bus
width (bits)
RAM
(megabytes)
Floppy
disk drive
Hard drive
(megabytes)
Operating
system
8088 4.77–9.5 16 8 1 (1) 5.25", 360 KB
3.5", 720 KB
3.5", 1.44 MB
10–40 PC-DOS
8086 6–12 16 20–60
80286 6–25 1–8 (1) 5.25", 360 KB
5.25", 1.2 MB
20–300 PC-DOS, OS/2
80386 16–33 32 32 1–16 (2) 3.5", 720 KB
3.5", 1.44 MB
40–600 UNIX
80386SX 16
  1. Under DOS, RAM is expanded beyond 1 MB with EMS memory boards
  2. Under DOS, RAM is expanded beyond 1 MB with normal "extended" memory and a memory management program.

[edit] Trivia

  • Much of the original development team, including Don Estridge, perished on August 2, 1985, during the crash of Delta Air Lines Flight 191. As a result of this disaster, IBM and many other companies set limits on the number of employees allowed on a single flight.
  • Model 5150 was shown in Child's Play during the detective scene.
  • As of June 2006, IBM PC and XT models are still in use at the majority of U.S. National Weather Service upper-air observing sites. The computers are used to process data as it is returned from the ascending radiosonde, attached to a weather balloon. They are being phased out over a several year period, to be replaced by the Radiosonde Replacement System.

[edit] See also

[edit] References

[edit] External links

This article was originally based on material from the Free On-line Dictionary of Computing, which is licensed under the GFDL.

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