On Tue, 20 Nov 2007, Chuck Guzis wrote:
There were more 8086 mobos than you might
imagine. Consider, for
example, the Stearns PC. Since there was a CMOS 80C86 available
before the 80C88, the 8086 also found its way into several laptops.
Wasn't the PS/2 30 an 8086? (can't remember for sure)
Originally, yes, and so was the PS/2 Model 25. A PS/2 Model 30/286 was
released a bit later.
My prized AT&T PC 6300 (rebranded Olivetti M24) was a 7.16MHz 8086
(clock was divided by 2)
--
Jim Leonard (trixter at