floobydust wrote:
Well, having recently retired from Big Blue a few years back... and having been transferred to Boca Raton back in 1984 to specifically work with the Personal Computer line of products... I'm in a pretty good position to address pretty much anything around the earliest of machines through the PS/2 lineup, as I provided the support for key customers (meaning the fortune 500 ones) and had sign-off authority on most of the hardware announcements.
First of all...wow! I had no idea you had such a personal (work) connection with IBM. Especially during the early PC days. I would love to pick your brain on the things you remembered and what IBM was like back in the day.
floobydust wrote:
So... the parts themselves... in short, the basic idea was to use off the shelf components 100%, meaning no IBM proprietary circuitry or components.
Yep, I've read that many times. I don't want to keep drawing parallel to the Apple II, but you could almost say the same thing about it. Woz especially wanted an open design using off-the-shelf components. But for him, it was probably more of a necessity considering their small budget. It's actually amazing IBM went that route.
But, as you know, IBM couldn't produce the 5150 if they did it through the normal "IBM way". Not in a year, anyway.
floobydust wrote:
Certain choices were made for very specific reasons... and some IBM history in changing computer architectures which caused some grief for their customers. If you looked at Motorola, they has zero compatibility from their 8-bit 6800 MPUs to their newer 68000 MPUs, so anyone investing in their 8-bit MPU program would have to start from scratch when moving to their 16-bit/32-bit MPU program. Intel had a history of carrying old code along.... plus the IBM Displaywriter (hardware box) used a 8086, so there was already a relationship with Intel.
That's interesting to know. The fact I can run many programs for the 5150 on my modern Dell laptop is incredible. The same can't be said about Apple (running Apple II software on a Mac without emulation or extra hardware). Or Commodore (running C64 software on the Amiga).
floobydust wrote:
and the thinking/planning was the original 5150 (all IBM machines at that time had a 4-digit machine type) would have a production life of approximately 250K units.
HA! Little did they know...lol. I guess that's a "good type of problem" to have. IBM *really* understood the most profitable customer out there, the business customer. But it seems they didn't know it well enough in the beginning! I read in the "Blue Magic" book that it was said that IBM understood why the Apple II was such a success BETTER than Apple did.
floobydust wrote:
The bit that was IBM content was the chassis and the keyboard (which by itself was worlds better than any of the existing personal computer type machines).
I completely agree. Those keyboards are built very well (well, other than the PCjr chicklets...lol).
floobydust wrote:
It was also designed and built to have a long life span, as that was typical IBM product design and engineering.
I've read somewhere (Wikipedia IIRC) that IBM's quality control would even inspect the rosin flux inside the solder.
floobydust wrote:
I don't recall anybody thinking about the 6502 or Z80 back then... so I can only consider it a rumor started elsewhere.
I'm pretty sure I read that in the "Blue Magic" book on IBM. However, the book clearly states that some of the content may not be super accurate because most of it was taken from peoples' memory instead of documents from IBM. So perhaps someone falsely remembered that in the day and it became part of the book.
floobydust wrote:
All in all, I lived through all of this internally at IBM... as my daily job. To be perfectly blunt... the only reason that Intel and Microsoft are big and successful today is IBM's inclusion of them for the 5150 and follow-on products.
That sounds like a logical opinion. Where were they before IBM married them with DOS and the 5150? I'm sure they would have pulled through. Maybe they wouldn't be as big as they are today. But I think they would have survived. But I completely agree that IBM had a monumental role in their rising. Probably more so with Microsoft that Intel.
floobydust wrote:
How Microsoft came into the picture is a whole different story... for a different time however
If I ever wrote a book, it would be on the rise of personal computers starting in the 70's and include companies like IBM, Microsoft, Apple, Atari and Commodore (among others). I think there are so many interesting and important stories that haven't been told.
Thanks for the walk down memory lane!