• Welcome to Tux Reports: Where Penguins Fly. We hope you find the topics varied, interesting, and worthy of your time. Please become a member and join in the discussions.

Computer Freezes up at Log On screen in Windows XP

U

Unknown

Flightless Bird
First IBM PC's did have a color monitor. It was however only green.
"Tim Slattery" <Slattery_T@bls.gov> wrote in message
news:lmqbr55j17p30bi68d4hoedjr6v5o20v9o@4ax.com...
> Bob I <birelan@yahoo.com> wrote:
>
>>Then you'll have to tell IBM that they are wrong.
>>http://www-03.ibm.com/ibm/history/exhibits/pc25/pc25_birth.html

>
> Hmm... that article quotes Dave Bradley as saying "...We started to
> build a prototype to take - by the end of the year - to a then
> little-known company called Microsoft." That completely skips the
> story of IBMers going to Digital Research first, but missing
> connections with Gary Kildall, and then as a second choice going to
> Seattle to see Microsoft.
>
> It also says that it had a color monitor with 16 colors! My
> recollection - which may well be incomplete - is that we didn't get 16
> colors until EGA graphics debuted, years later. Hmm...looking at it
> again, it says the monitor had "16 foreground and background colors",
> but that "Its graphics were in four colors". I don't remember having
> any color until the Hercules cards sometime in the mid-80s.
>
> --
> Tim Slattery
> Slattery_T@bls.gov
> http://members.cox.net/slatteryt
 
B

Bob I

Flightless Bird
Tim Slattery wrote:

> Bob I <birelan@yahoo.com> wrote:
>
>
>>Then you'll have to tell IBM that they are wrong.
>>http://www-03.ibm.com/ibm/history/exhibits/pc25/pc25_birth.html

>
>
> Hmm... that article quotes Dave Bradley as saying "...We started to
> build a prototype to take - by the end of the year - to a then
> little-known company called Microsoft." That completely skips the
> story of IBMers going to Digital Research first, but missing
> connections with Gary Kildall, and then as a second choice going to
> Seattle to see Microsoft.


Timeline and sequence
http://www.businessweek.com/magazine/content/04_43/b3905109_mz063.htm

>
> It also says that it had a color monitor with 16 colors! My
> recollection - which may well be incomplete - is that we didn't get 16
> colors until EGA graphics debuted, years later. Hmm...looking at it
> again, it says the monitor had "16 foreground and background colors",
> but that "Its graphics were in four colors". I don't remember having
> any color until the Hercules cards sometime in the mid-80s.
>


That means you could "choose between 16 colors"
http://nemesis.lonestar.org/reference/video/cga.html
 
K

Ken Blake, MVP

Flightless Bird
On Thu, 1 Apr 2010 21:18:41 -0700, "Greg Russell"
<grussell@invalid.con> wrote:

> In news:8obar5h4gqbu5i764k11d2qrmajlu46tps@4ax.com,
> Ken Blake, MVP <kblake@this.is.an.invalid.domain> typed:
>
> >>> The Intel 8088 CPU, used in the original IBM PC, ...
> >>
> >> No, it was an 8086.

> >
> > Sorry, but that's not correct. It was an 8088.

>
> I've still got an original IBM PC, and it states right on the processor that
> it's an 8086. The 8088 was produced soon after, and I was sorry that I had
> rushed into the purchase so soon.



Well, it's hard to argue if you say that's what yours says, but see

http://www.old-computers.com/museum/computer.asp?c=274

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Intel_8086

http://inventors.about.com/library/weekly/aa031599.htm
>


--
Ken Blake, Microsoft MVP (Windows Desktop Experience) since 2003
Please Reply to the Newsgroup
 
Top