Difference between revisions of "IBM-compatible PC"

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An '''IBM-compatible PC''' (often shortened to '''PC''') is the term used for a [[personal computer]] which is compatible with the [[IBM]] line of personal computers (in the sense of 'it will run all the software for the IBM personal computer'). IBM no longer makes PCs, but the terminology persists.
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An '''IBM-compatible PC''' (often shortened to '''PC''') is the term used for a [[personal computer]] which is compatible with the [[IBM PC]] line of personal computers (in the sense of 'it will run all the [[software]] for the IBM Personal Computer'). IBM no longer makes PCs, but the terminology persists.
  
[[Compaq]] was the first company to make a machine which could run any and all software for the actual IBM PC. Nowadays, other than personal computers from [[Apple]], essentially all personal computers follow the IBM PC standard.
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[[Compaq]] was the first company to make a machine which could run any and all software for the actual IBM PC. Once these machines appeared, they rapidly drove out the other PC's which were not IBM-compatible, as the latter often required custom (and low-volume) versions of software.
  
The first IBM PC was the [[IBM 5150]].
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Nowadays, other than personal computers from [[Apple]], essentially all personal computers follow the IBM PC standard.
  
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==See also==
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* [[Industry Standard Architecture]]
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* [[IBM pc memory map]]
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[[Category: Architectures]]
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[[Category: Compatible PCs]]

Latest revision as of 22:43, 12 January 2024

An IBM-compatible PC (often shortened to PC) is the term used for a personal computer which is compatible with the IBM PC line of personal computers (in the sense of 'it will run all the software for the IBM Personal Computer'). IBM no longer makes PCs, but the terminology persists.

Compaq was the first company to make a machine which could run any and all software for the actual IBM PC. Once these machines appeared, they rapidly drove out the other PC's which were not IBM-compatible, as the latter often required custom (and low-volume) versions of software.

Nowadays, other than personal computers from Apple, essentially all personal computers follow the IBM PC standard.

See also