High performance coprocessor boards of the 80s and 90s - was Re: SGI ONYX
Paul Berger
phb.hfx at gmail.com
Thu Apr 21 16:44:10 CDT 2016
On 2016-04-21 6:35 PM, Josh Dersch wrote:
> On Thu, Apr 21, 2016 at 2:34 PM, Ali <cctalk at ibm51xx.net> wrote:
>
>>> Actually, the first one was called XT/370 because it plugged into an
>>> XT!
>>> Then came AT/370. Those were obviously ISA boards. Then came some
>>> variants that were microchannel. The final iterations were PCI based.
>>>
>> Guy,
>>
>> I am not sure about the other systems but my understanding of the XT/370
>> and AT/370 was that they were glorified terminals i.e. instead of having a
>> terminal and a PC on your desk you could have it all in one. Is this wrong?
>>
> I think you're thinking of the 3270 PC and 3270 AT, which was pretty much
> what you described here...
>
> - Josh
>
No the 3270 PC and 3270 AT where a special configuration for 3270
terminal emulation it conatined a special keyboard with more keys that
the normal keyboard and connected to a special adapter card in the
system. These machines also had a different display and of course came
with a 3270 emulation adapter.
There was definitely a XT/370 and likely an AT/370 as well the processor
on the the 370 card in these machines was rumoured to be a modified
Motorola 68K with special microcode to execute 370 instructions. These
machines ran a modified version of VM.
The 9371 system used PS/2 mod 80 system boards for I/O processors and
had a microchannel card sandwich in them that was the 370 processor, I
do not believe they could run MVS but they could run VM and VSE.
Paul.
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