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The Personal System/2 Model 30 and Personal System/2 Model 30 286 are IBM's entry-level desktop computers in their Personal System/2 (PS/2) family of personal computers. As opposed to higher-end entries in the PS/2 line which use Micro Channel bus architecture, the Model 30 features an Industry Standard Architecture bus, allowing it to use expansion cards from its direct predecessors, the PC ...
Aptiva computers were typically sold as a bundle which included monitor, speakers, keyboard and mouse. First-generation models came with IBM PC DOS 6.3 and Windows 3.1. Pentium-generation Aptivas came with Windows 95 and OS/2 'select-a-system' (PC DOS 7/Windows 3.1 and OS/2 Warp) on selected models. Most Aptiva models included a modem and a ...
The Personal Computer Series, or PC Series, was IBM's follow-up to the Personal System/2 and PS/ValuePoint. Announced in October 1994 and withdrawn in October 2000, it was replaced by the IBM NetVista , apart from the Pentium Pro-based PC360 and PC365, which were replaced by the IBM IntelliStation .
Specifications vary depending on OEM, similar to GT230 v2. G92 [57] 500 1250 256 51.20 256 4.000 24.00 240.0 G92B [58] 96:32:16 1024 16.32 DDR2 128 8.000 GeForce GT 340 GT215 550 1340 3400 96:32:8 512 1024 54.4 GDDR5 [59] 128 257.3 69 OEM Card, similar to GT240
On the front of the unit there two dials underneath the PC-speaker to adjust the brightness of the screen and the volume of the PC-speaker. The PC-speaker in the Compaq Portable 486 is unique in that there is a 3.5 mm audio input jack on the side of the unit to allow a third party ISA sound card to pass through its audio output to the PC ...
SGI Indigo, front SGI Indigo, back. The Indigo, introduced as the IRIS Indigo, is a line of workstation computers developed and manufactured by Silicon Graphics, Inc. (SGI). SGI first announced the system in July 1991.
Summit components POWER9 wafer with TOP500 certificates for Summit and Sierra. Summit or OLCF-4 was a supercomputer developed by IBM for use at Oak Ridge Leadership Computing Facility (OLCF), a facility at the Oak Ridge National Laboratory, United States of America.
The first computers bearing the Macintosh Quadra name were the Quadra 700 and Quadra 900, both introduced in 1991 with a central processing unit (CPU) speed of 25 MHz.The 700 featured identical case dimensions as the Macintosh IIci but vertically oriented as a mini-tower, with a Processor Direct Slot (PDS) expansion slot, while the latter was a newly designed full-tower case with five NuBus ...