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IBM Puts PC Business Up for Sale

valdean writes "When I was growing up (in the 80s), there were two kinds of computers that my friends (or, more specifically, our parents) had at home: Apple and the IBM-Compatible. IBM defined the PC at that time, and deserves a large share of credit for taking the PC out of the hobby shop and into the mainstream. Now it looks like IBM is getting out of the PC business altogether. CBS Marketwatch has another report."

4 of 527 comments (clear)

  1. Makes sense by magefile · · Score: 4, Informative

    They're not good at it anymore - desktop-wise, at least. You can get a superior computer from Dell/Compaq/etc, and it'll be cheaper, even after the 5% employee discount (from personal experience).

  2. ...and announces the Power Alliance by turgid · · Score: 4, Informative
    Maybe it has something to do with the Power Chip Alliance they announced the other day?

    One goal of the alliance is to make Power chips used in high volumes. IBM has shipped more than 1 million PowerPC 970 chips, it said. The more widely used the Power processors are, however, the more directly they compete against the dominant x86 family such as Intel's Pentium and Advanced Micro Devices' Opteron.

    Look out Wintel! Look out Sun?

  3. IBM's motto or slogan or whatever was "Think" by HWheel · · Score: 5, Informative

    Throughout the 60's and 70's, IBM was famous for their "Think" motto. Apparently that's missed by a lot of youngsters today, but that's why they're called "ThinkPads," I believe.

  4. Re:Who would have guessed... by TheRaven64 · · Score: 4, Informative
    Umm, your post is almost exactly 100% wrong. The original IBM PC was based on the 8088, a proprietary CPU manufactured by Intel. 8088 compatible chips were also available from AMD because IBM (I think - it may have been someone else) refused to buy from Intel without a second source. This made the chip no less proprietary. Most of the hardware in the PC was off-the-shelf (it was a rush-to-market job). The only thing made by IBM was the BIOS, which they refused to license. Eventually, clones appeared with reverse-engineered BIOSes, but not with the blessing of IBM.

    In contrast, the PowerPC is based on an open specification jointly developed by Apple, IBM and Motorola (AIM). PowerPC chips are actively developed by both IBM and Motorola, although Apple does provide some input to the design teams, at least at IBM (for example, the Altivec/VMX capability on IBM's PowerPC 970 was added at Apple's request). Anyone can create a PowerPC based system. The Common Hardware Reference Platform (CHRP) defined by the AIM group specifies the firmware interface (Open Firmware - used in Sun, Apple and IBM hardware. An open specification, unlike the PC BIOS which had to be reverse engineered for compatibility) as well as the CPU, making it every easy to build PowerPC systems.

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