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IBM PERSONAL SYSTEM/2 MODEL 30-001 [Looking to upgrade? Advanced tech: Better security? Only $1,695]
IBM ^ | April 4, 1989 | IBM

Posted on 02/11/2021 6:29:45 AM PST by daniel1212


Brief Description of Announcement, Charges, and Availability

       The Personal System/2 (R) (PS/2 (R)) Model 30-001 enhances the
current PS/2 Model 30 product line with a single diskette
configuration.  The Model 30-001 is a desktop system that provides an
8MHz 8086 processor, 640Kb memory, a 3.5-inch 720Kb diskette, Multi
Color Graphics Array (MCGA) graphics, and PC XT (TM) compatibility.
The system provides expansion flexibility with support for a second
diskette or a fixed disk drive.  The system maintains compatibility
with most existing IBM Disk Operating System (DOS) software.
       The PS/2 720Kb 1-inch High Diskette Drive is a 3.5-inch
diskette drive that can be installed as a second diskette drive in
the 8530-001.  The feature comes complete with diskette drive, bezel,
and installation instructions.
       The PS/2 5.25-inch External Diskette Drive Adapter Cable is
required to install the PS/2 5.25-inch External Diskette Drive and
Adapter on an 8530-001 or on any new 8530-021 or on any installed
8530-021 with serial numbers from 2500000-2999999.
       NOTE:  The 720Kb 1-inch High Diskette Drive and the 5.25-inch
External Diskette Drive cannot be installed in the same system unit.
 (R) Registered trademark of the International Business Machines
   Corporation.
 (TM) Trademark of the International Business Machines Corporation.
       Purchase Prices:
Personal System/2 Model 30 (8530-001)       $1,695
720Kb 1-inch High Diskette Drive               155
  (#1027) (6451027)
5.25-inch External Diskette Adapter Cable       21
  (#1033) (6451033)
       Planned Availability Date:  April 7, 1989

Customer Letter Section

HIGHLIGHTS
o   8MHz 8086 microprocessor
o   640Kb of memory standard on the system board
o   MCGA graphics standard on system board
o   Expansion flexibility (720Kb diskette or fixed disk drive)
o   PC XT compatibility
o   Optional 8MHz 8087 Co-Processor
o   Ergonomic desktop design
o   Ease of installation and configuration
DESCRIPTION
       The Personal System/2 Model 30-001 enhances the current
Models 30 product line.  The system features an 8086 microprocessor
and 640Kb of memory, standard.
       The 8530-001 comes standard with:
o   720Kb, 3.5-inch diskette drive (1-inch high)
o   Keyboard port
o   Pointing device port
o   Serial/asynchronous port
o   Parallel port
o   MCGA port
o   Three full-sized option card slots, which accept most PC XT
    adapter cards
o   Enhanced Personal Computer Keyboard
o   Time-of-day clock with battery backup.
       The MCGA port supports graphics and text modes including
640 x 480 in two colors and 320 x 200 in 256 colors for graphics, and
40 x 25 in 16 colors and 80 x 25 in 16 colors for text, and maintains
compatibility with CGA modes.
       The system has 128Kb of ROM including automatic power-on
self-test routines, IBM personal computer compatible BIOS, and the
BASIC language interpreter.
       Additional features include an open bay that allows expansion
of the system by adding a second 720Kb diskette or 20Mb or 30Mb fixed
disk drive option.
       The 8530-001 supports the following new features:
o   IBM PS/2 720Kb 1-inch High Diskette Drive (#1027) (6451027)
o   IBM PS/2 5.25-inch External Diskette Drive Adapter Cable (#1033)
    (6451033)
o   IBM PS/2 30Mb Fixed Disk Drive I (#1030) (6451030) -- (refer to
    Product Announcement 189-051, dated April 4, 1989).

       The 8530-001 also supports the IBM PS/2 20Mb Fixed Disk Drive
(#4115) (27F4969) previously announced.
       The 8530-001 supports all of the features currently available
under the 8530-021.  This includes but is not limited to the
following:
o   IBM Personal System/2 Math Co-Processor (#5001) (1501217)
o   Personal System/2 Speech Adapter (#5002) (1501216)
o   IBM 2MB Expanded Memory Adapter (#3905) (2685193)
o   IBM Personal System/2 Mouse (#8770) (6450350)
o   5.25-inch External Diskette Drive Adapter (#8750) (6450244)
o   Personal System/2 Display Adapter (#4050) (1887744)
o   PC Network Baseband Adapter (#1221) (1501221)
o   PC Network Baseband Extender (5173-001) (6134339)
o   PC Network Adapter II (#1220) (1501220)
o   IBM Token-Ring Network PC Adapter (#3391) (6339100)
o   IBM Token Ring Network Adapter II (#9858) (25F9858)
o   IBM Token Ring Network 16/4 Adapter (#7367) (25F7367)
o   IBM PC Music Feature (#6011) (81X8630)
o   General Purpose Interface Bus (GPIB) Adapter (#1503) (6451503)
o   IBM GPIB Cable (#5040) (63X4882)
o   InfoWindow (TM) Enhanced Graphics Adapter (#5420) (56X2412)
o   Serial/Parallel Adapter (#0215) (6450125)
o   Serial Adapter Cable (#0217) (6450217)
o   Binary Synchronous Communications (BSC) Adapter (#1204) (1501204)
o   SDLC Communications Adapter (#1205) (1501205)
o   Game Control Adapter (#1300) (1501300)
o   Data Acquisition and Control Adapter (#1502) (6451502)
o   3278/3279 Emulation Adapter (#5050) (83X9670)
o   Enhanced 5250 Emulation Adapter Kit, Version 2.12 (#2911)
    (30F5383)
o   Enhanced 5250 Display Station Emulation Integrated Cable Assembly
    (#2877) (6403635)
o   Display Station Emulation Adapter Kit (#2887) (92X0813)
o   5520 Display Station Emulation Integrated Cable Assembly (#2892)
    (6100218)
o   Realtime Interface Co-Processor (128Kb) and related features
    (#6165) (85X2710)
o   Realtime Interface Co-Processor (512Kb) and related features
    (#6166) (85X2706)
o   Realtime Interface Co-Processor Mulitport and related features
    (#6241) (00F5527).
 (TM) Trademark of the International Business Machines Corporation.
LIMITATIONS:  The Speech Adapter (#5002) and the 3278/3279 Emulation
Adapter (#5050) cannot be installed in the same system unit.  The
720Kb 1-inch High Diskette Drive (#1027) and the 5.25-inch External
Diskette Drive (#4869) cannot be installed in the same system unit.
ACCESSORIES:  Data Migration Facility (#5003) (1501224)
INPUT/OUTPUT DEVICES SUPPORTED:
       Displays:
o   8503 Monochrome Display
o   8507 19-inch Monochrome Display
o   8512 14-inch Color Display
o   8513 Color Display
o   8514 16-inch Color Display
o   4055 InfoWindow Display
       Printers:
o   3812 Page Printer
o   3852 Model 2 Color Jetprinter
o   4201-002 Proprinter (TM) II
o   4201-003 Proprinter III
o   4202-002 Proprinter II XL
o   4202-003 Proprinter III XL
o   4207-002 Proprinter X24E
o   4208-002 Proprinter XL24E
o   4216 Personal Page Printer
o   5201-001 Quietwriter (R) Printer
o   5201-002 Quietwriter Printer
o   5202-001 Quietwriter III Printer
o   5204-001 Quickwriter (R) Printer
o   5216 Model 2 Wheelprinter
o   5223 Model 1 Wheelprinter E
o   4250/II ElectroCompositor
o   4250 Printer Model 1
       Plotters:
o   IBM 6180 Color Plotter
o   IBM 6184 Color Plotter
o   IBM 6186 Model 1, 2 Color Plotter
o   IBM 7372 Color Plotter
o   IBM 7374 Color Plotter
o   IBM 7375 Model 1, 2 Color Plotter
       Scanners:
o   IBM 3117 Scanner
o   IBM 3118 Scanner
       Tape:
o   IBM 6157 Streaming Tape Drive
o   IBM 6157 Streaming Tape Drive Model 2
       Other Devices:
o   IBM 4869 5.25-inch External Diskette Drive
o   IBM 3363 Optical Disk Drive (A01, B01)
o   ROLMphone (R) 244PC (#46900)
o   Personal System/2 Screen Reader (6450602).
 (TM) Trademark of the International Business Machines Corporation.
 (R) Registered trademark of the International Business Machines
   Corporation.
NATIONAL LANGUAGE SUPPORT (NLS)
NLS support is provided for the following languages:  U.S. English,
Worldwide English (U.K.), French, German, Italian, Spanish,
Latin-American Spanish, Danish, Belgian (Flemish/French), Dutch,
Finnish, Swedish, Norwegian, Portuguese, Swiss (German/French),
Canadian-French, Arabic, and Hebrew.



TOPICS: Business/Economy; Computers/Internet; Education; History
KEYWORDS: 1989; archaic; computertech; dinosaurs; windowspinglist
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To: Red Badger

“Windows ... You will believe your 386 will fly like a 286 running DOS.”


21 posted on 02/11/2021 6:44:41 AM PST by Rurudyne (Standup Philosopher)
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To: Dr. Sivana
The Model 30 was a piece of JUNK.

Thanks. We should wait for a newer model.

22 posted on 02/11/2021 6:45:12 AM PST by daniel1212 (Turn to the Lord Jesus as a damned + destitute sinner + trust Him to save + be baptized+follow Him!)
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To: Mr. Jeeves
> With DOS, 640K really was enough for anybody

Except the CIA/FBI/NSA/DoD/DHS who need the extra RAM to run their spyware to keep tabs on counter-revolutionaries that voted for Trump ...

23 posted on 02/11/2021 6:45:49 AM PST by SecondAmendment (This just proves my latest theory ... LEFTISTS RUIN EVERYTHING !)
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To: Red Badger
That MicroChannel Bus will be AWESOME!........................

But do you really need it?

24 posted on 02/11/2021 6:45:58 AM PST by daniel1212 (Turn to the Lord Jesus as a damned + destitute sinner + trust Him to save + be baptized+follow Him!)
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To: daniel1212

As a yute, I was deprived because my parents would not buy an IBM 360 for my bedroom so I could get my homework done faster


25 posted on 02/11/2021 6:46:27 AM PST by Paladin2
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To: daniel1212; Abby4116; afraidfortherepublic; aft_lizard; AF_Blue; AppyPappy; arnoldc1; ...
IBM PS/2 Flashback ... PING!

You can find all the Windows Ping list threads with FR search: just search on keyword "windowspinglist".

Thanks to daniel1212 for the ping!

26 posted on 02/11/2021 6:47:07 AM PST by dayglored ("Listen. Strange women lying in ponds distributing swords is no basis for a system of government.")
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To: Mr. Jeeves

And you could get Extended or expanded memory. Oracle first came out running in the extended memory partition. I paid $500 for 2 meg hardwired memory board for the IBM machine. Mine was a clone so i had to melt the chips off and put them on an extended memory card. Ran real slow but i had a full blown oracle database running on the machine.


27 posted on 02/11/2021 6:48:18 AM PST by kvanbrunt2
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To: daniel1212

Of course I need it!

To run Lotus 1-2-3!.....................


28 posted on 02/11/2021 6:53:06 AM PST by Red Badger (SLEAZIN' is the REASON for the TREASON .................................)
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To: daniel1212

Way back in the early 80’s I worked as an operator on a NCR Criterion mainframe while in college. Believe it or not, it had 512k of main memory. The CDC (Control Data Corp) removable disk packs were 300MB capacity.

The CPU wasn’t multiprocessing, it was multi tasking.


29 posted on 02/11/2021 6:53:40 AM PST by CodeJockey (Dum Spiro, Pugno)
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To: adorno
Not with this Desktop, out of 32GB: MemInfo Thank God for providing it.
30 posted on 02/11/2021 6:54:46 AM PST by daniel1212 (Turn to the Lord Jesus as a damned + destitute sinner + trust Him to save + be baptized+follow Him!)
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To: cgbg
They had guaranteed privacy—no Internet connection!
A $50 Zoom or USR 1200 baud modem and a Delphi account would give you Internet, even then. No web yet, though.

31 posted on 02/11/2021 6:56:24 AM PST by Dr. Sivana (There is no salvation in politics)
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To: Paladin2
As a yute, I was deprived because my parents would not buy an IBM 360 for my bedroom so I could get my homework done faster

Somehow somewhere this deprivation must have violated some principle of Political Correctness.

32 posted on 02/11/2021 6:58:03 AM PST by daniel1212 (Turn to the Lord Jesus as a damned + destitute sinner + trust Him to save + be baptized+follow Him!)
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To: enumerated
Exciting times, but also innocent times. Back when we, the end users, were who they were trying to please. Somewhere along the line we became the mark, the prey. The tech industry no longer serves us - it serves those preying upon us - its goal is to give them better access to us and reveal our vulnerabilities.

Yes, the tech industry now promotes the moral equivalent of bad coding, of malware.

33 posted on 02/11/2021 7:00:39 AM PST by daniel1212 (Turn to the Lord Jesus as a damned + destitute sinner + trust Him to save + be baptized+follow Him!)
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To: FreedomPoster
I remember when I got that first “Disk full error” on that MASSIVE 10 Meg hard drive. That was a shocker!

We sold computers for a living in the 80's and 90's. Our first was in 1982, a dual floppy, don't remember how much ram and a 10" orange monitor, cost $5,000. Everybody we met wanted one, so we became a dealer for a brand, then we built them ourselves for almost 20 years. High end graphics and cad systems, many of them we custom built for the programmers at Microsoft.

I remember when in about 1983 or 84 we put a 5MB hard drive in a dual floppy machine. Everybody that came into our store and saw it, said, "what would you need all that storage for?" Lol, still laugh about it today.

34 posted on 02/11/2021 7:02:01 AM PST by thirst4truth (America, What difference does it make?)
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To: daniel1212

No one will ever need more than 640k memory, you are set for life


35 posted on 02/11/2021 7:03:27 AM PST by HangnJudge (Amen (Awomen) brother!)
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To: daniel1212
Remember DecTape?


36 posted on 02/11/2021 7:07:22 AM PST by HangnJudge (Amen (Awomen) brother!)
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To: daniel1212

So that we may see what is being discussed: IBM PS/2 Model 30!

FYI: For those not in the know, that is a green-phosphor Cathode Ray Tube (CRT) Monitor there, ah such memories!

37 posted on 02/11/2021 7:08:52 AM PST by SES1066 (I love my Country, but I fear too much Government!)
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To: thirst4truth

The hard drive event would have been in about ‘85. That was my employer’s PC that we’d upgraded from dual floppy to single floppy and the HDD.

I bought an original IBM-PC 5150 in the Spring of ‘82 on a student discount plan. Took out a small loan, I think the system was about $3500. 2 FDDs, 64k RAM soldered to the motherboard, 5151 green screen monitor and card. Another 64k on a Quadram Quadboard that also got me a serial port, a parallel port, and a clock. Epson MX-80 dot matrix printer.

Those were the days! Hey, I no longer had to go to the computer center on campus!


38 posted on 02/11/2021 7:09:27 AM PST by FreedomPoster (Islam delenda est)
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To: Mr. Jeeves

We bought and networked several of these at the office. Once we had all we needed I recall them being about $4500 a piece.


39 posted on 02/11/2021 7:11:18 AM PST by Woodman
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To: thirst4truth
I remember when in about 1983 or 84 we put a 5MB hard drive in a dual floppy machine. Everybody that came into our store and saw it, said, "what would you need all that storage for?" Lol, still laugh about it today.

I had a 80MB HDD once and thought I would never need that much. And the cost. Now a 32GB flash drive can be less $10.

40 posted on 02/11/2021 7:12:02 AM PST by daniel1212 (Turn to the Lord Jesus as a damned + destitute sinner + trust Him to save + be baptized+follow Him!)
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