Columbia University Computing History   
Translations  (see below for credits):

The IBM CS-9000

IBM CS-9000 Announced in June 1982. Based on the 32-bit Motorola 68000 CPU, this personal workstation was intended for interfacing with laboratory instruments to acquire and analyze experimental data. In addition to a regular PC keyboard, it had a touch panel for controlling experiments. It had a custom realtime multitasking operating system called CSOS, and could be programmed in Pascal, Fortran, or Basic. The 128KB memory could be expanded up to 5MB. Up to four 10MB hard disks could be installed, as well as various combinations of 5.25- and 8-inch floppy disks. The screen had 80 columns × 30 rows in text mode and 768 × 480 pixels in monochrome graphics mode. I/O interfaces included serial, parallel, IEEE-488, and analog, with an integrated color printer — a big package in a small footprint.

I attended a nondisclosure presentation of this product by IBM in 1980 or '81 and recall commenting that if they stripped away the instrument control panel and interfaces, they'd have a desktop computer that was miles ahead of anything else on the market. Wrong division, I guess.

Also see:
IBM System 9000, Wikipedia, accessed 27 May 2019.

Translations of this page courtesy of...

Lan­guage Link Date Trans­lator Organ­ization
Belarusian Беларуская 2023/08/22 Vladyslav Byshuk | Владислав Бишук studycrumb.com
Finnish Suomi 2023/08/31 Kerstin Schmidt https://writemyessay4me.org/
French Français 2023/08/31 Kerstin Schmidt prothesiswriter.com
German Deutsch 2023/08/31 Kerstin Schmidt writemypaper4me.org
Italian Italiano 2023/08/31 Kerstin Schmidt https://admission-writer.com/
Polish Polski 2023/08/31 Kerstin Schmidt justdomyhomework.com
Russian Русский 2023/07/16 Alexey Plastic Recycling Company
Slovak Slovenčina 2023/08/22 Vladyslav Byshuk | Владислав Бишук skyclinic.ua
Spanish Español 2023/08/31 Kerstin Schmidt https://pro-academic-writers.com/
Ukrainian Українська 2023/08/22 Vladyslav Byshuk | Владислав Бишук studybounty.com
[About translations]
Columbia University Computing History Frank da Cruz / fdc@columbia.edu This page created: January 2001 Last update: 13 September 2023