Difference between revisions of "IBM 5150"

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{{Infobox Machine
 
{{Infobox Machine
 
| name = IBM 5150/IBM PC
 
| name = IBM 5150/IBM PC
| manufacturer = [[IBM]]
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| manufacturer = [[International Business Machines]]
 
| image = IBM 5150.jpg
 
| image = IBM 5150.jpg
 
| caption = The IBM PC
 
| caption = The IBM PC
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}}
 
}}
  
The IBM 5150 was IBM's entry into the personal computer marketplace, the IBM PC. It was introduced in stores on 1981-08-12. The original configuration had a motherboard designed for up to 64KB of RAM, and a cassette tape drive, but could be expanded to include a diskette drive, and a hard disk. At the beginning they were advertised for around $1,600 for a unit with just 16KB of RAM and a keyboard[http://www.vintage-computer.com/ibm_pc.shtml]. Retail would be around $1,000 though[http://classiccmp.org/pipermail/cctech/2013-July/106735.html], or maybe more likely in the $1,300 - $1,400 range[http://classiccmp.org/pipermail/cctech/2013-July/106743.html]).  
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The '''IBM 5150''' was [[International Business Machines|IBM]]'s entry into the [[personal computer]] marketplace; the '''IBM PC'''. It was introduced in stores on 1981-08-12.
  
In practice you would add a at least a video adapter, probably some RAM, and a floppy disk drive. Then the price would be quite different. Back then, both types of disk drives were of the 5 1/4" full height form factor.  IBM made the PC an open standard, publishing not only schematics, but also including a BIOS listing in the technical reference.  When people wished to build clones of the IBM PC, IBM would license them for a 5% royalty fee, which not only made the PC a popular platform to clone, but also with the available schematics, allowed for everyone to be pin compatible with the ISA slots, creating a thriving hardware expansion business.
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The original configuration had a [[motherboard]] with 16K built in, designed for up to 64KB of [[Dynamic RAM|RAM]], and a cassette [[tape drive]], but could be expanded to include a [[Disk#Low-cost disks|diskette drive]], and a [[Disk#Recent developments|hard disk]].
  
The IBM PC included Microsoft BASIC in ROM, which allowed the PC to function like many of the computers of the time with a simple ROM BASIC. With the addition of a disk drive, OS options included [[CP/M]] and [[MS-DOS]] at the time of sale.
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At the beginning they were advertised for around $1,600 for a unit with just 16KB of RAM and a keyboard[http://www.vintage-computer.com/ibm_pc.shtml]. Retail would be around $1,000 though[http://classiccmp.org/pipermail/cctech/2013-July/106735.html], or maybe more likely in the $1,300 - $1,400 range[http://classiccmp.org/pipermail/cctech/2013-July/106743.html]).  
  
The IBM PC, also established the 8 bit expansion slot, or [[ISA]] bus standard as it was later called.
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In practice you would add a at least a video adapter, probably some RAM, and a floppy disk drive. Then the price would be quite different. Back then, both types of disk drives were of the 5 1/4" full height form factor, single sided or double sided.
  
[[Image:IBM 5150 motherboard.jpg|thumb|right|400px|IBM PC Motherboard]]
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IBM made the PC an open standard, publishing not only schematics, but also including a [[BIOS]] [[listing]] in the technical reference. When people wished to build clones of the IBM PC, IBM would license them for a 5% royalty fee, which not only made the PC a popular platform to clone, but also with the available schematics, allowed for everyone to be pin compatible with the ISA slots, creating a thriving hardware expansion business.
  
The PC was replaced by the wildly popular [[IBM 5160|IBM XT]].
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[[Image:IBM 5150 motherboard.jpg|thumb|left|400px|IBM PC Motherboard]]
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The IBM PC included [[Microsoft BASIC]] in [[ROM]], called Cassette Basic, which allowed the PC to function like many of the computers of the time with a simple ROM BASIC.  With the addition of a disk drive, OS options included [[CP/M-86]] and [[MS-DOS 1.0, and later MS-DOS 1.1]] at the time of sale. DOS included a simple version of BASIC, known as disk BASIC, and a graphics version known as Advanced BASIC (BASICA.COM)
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The IBM PC, also established the 8 bit expansion slot, or [[Industry Standard Architecture|ISA]] bus standard as it was later called.
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The PC started the [[IBM PC]] line; it was replaced by the wildly popular [[IBM XT]], adding 3 more slots, and support for more memory on the motherboard ( 64k, expandable to 256k ).
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The picture shows 5 ROMS, one was the ROM BIOS, and the other 4 were cassette BASIC.
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==See also==
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* [[IBM-compatible PC]]
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==External links==
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* [https://twitter.com/nixcraft/status/743144212569350148 Original IBM PC 5150 Prototype]
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* [https://archive.org/details/bitsavers_ibmpcpc150renceApr83_25494749 IBM PC Technical Reference BIOS Listings]
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** See Appendix A: ROM BIOS Listings Pg A-1
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[[Category: IBM PCs]]

Latest revision as of 00:02, 29 March 2019


IBM 5150/IBM PC
IBM 5150.jpg
The IBM PC
Manufacturer: International Business Machines
Year Introduced: 1981
Word Size: 16 bit


The IBM 5150 was IBM's entry into the personal computer marketplace; the IBM PC. It was introduced in stores on 1981-08-12.

The original configuration had a motherboard with 16K built in, designed for up to 64KB of RAM, and a cassette tape drive, but could be expanded to include a diskette drive, and a hard disk.

At the beginning they were advertised for around $1,600 for a unit with just 16KB of RAM and a keyboard[1]. Retail would be around $1,000 though[2], or maybe more likely in the $1,300 - $1,400 range[3]).

In practice you would add a at least a video adapter, probably some RAM, and a floppy disk drive. Then the price would be quite different. Back then, both types of disk drives were of the 5 1/4" full height form factor, single sided or double sided.

IBM made the PC an open standard, publishing not only schematics, but also including a BIOS listing in the technical reference. When people wished to build clones of the IBM PC, IBM would license them for a 5% royalty fee, which not only made the PC a popular platform to clone, but also with the available schematics, allowed for everyone to be pin compatible with the ISA slots, creating a thriving hardware expansion business.

IBM PC Motherboard

The IBM PC included Microsoft BASIC in ROM, called Cassette Basic, which allowed the PC to function like many of the computers of the time with a simple ROM BASIC. With the addition of a disk drive, OS options included CP/M-86 and MS-DOS 1.0, and later MS-DOS 1.1 at the time of sale. DOS included a simple version of BASIC, known as disk BASIC, and a graphics version known as Advanced BASIC (BASICA.COM)

The IBM PC, also established the 8 bit expansion slot, or ISA bus standard as it was later called.

The PC started the IBM PC line; it was replaced by the wildly popular IBM XT, adding 3 more slots, and support for more memory on the motherboard ( 64k, expandable to 256k ).

The picture shows 5 ROMS, one was the ROM BIOS, and the other 4 were cassette BASIC.

See also

External links