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Document Content Architecture, or DCA for short, is a standard developed by IBM for text documents in the early 1980s. DCA was used on mainframe and IBM i systems and formed the basis of DisplayWrite's file format. DCA was later extended as MO:DCA (Mixed Object Document Content Architecture), which added embedded data files.
Depending on the DisplayWrite version, the document files use .DOC or .TXT file name extension. The DisplayWrite software can export to and import from pure DCA/RFT files (which typically have .DCA or .RFT file name extension). RFT (IBM Revisable Form Text) should not be confused with RTF (Rich Text Format), which is a Microsoft specification.
Last week, IBM reported its first quarterly earnings miss in eight years, and the company said at the time that it would spend $1 billion cutting jobs among its workforce as a way to reduce expenses.
The IBM 6580 Displaywriter System is a 16-bit microcomputer that was marketed and sold by IBM's Office Products Division primarily as a word processor.Announced on June 17, 1980 [1] [2] and effectively withdrawn from marketing on July 2, 1986, [3] the system was sold with a 5 MHz Intel 8086, 128 KB to 448 KB of RAM, a swivel-mounted monochrome CRT monitor, a detached keyboard, a detached 8 ...
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Data from Office System/6 can be migrated to IBM 5110 and 5120 with third-party applications. [4] Internally, the OS/6 uses an IBM proprietary 16-bit single-chip microprocessor called the OPD Mini Processor. [citation needed] This processor is a single-chip FET microprocessor designed by Richard Vrba.
In Microsoft Word, a file was opened with Esc (to open the menus), T (for Transfer), L (for Load). In WordStar, ^ K D (to get to the Opening Menu), followed by D. [2] In emacs, a file is opened with Ctrl+ x followed by Ctrl+ f (for find-file). In vi, use Esc to allow commands, then : e space. to open the file browser.