Dave's Place

The IBM PC XT

PC XT photo I got an IBM PC XT around 1985. A lot of us at IBM were getting XT's to log on to our office systems from home. Of course then the office system was a big mainframe host, and we logged on with PROFS, one of the earliest, and still one of the best e-mail systems (remember Ollie North in the White House and the deleted PROFS notes that DID NOT disappear?). In those days, e-mail at home was an incredible productivity enhancement. My team and I could send PROFS notes any time, including nights and weekends. It seemed that the whole pace of business accelerated an order of magnitude when we got this capability.

Graphics

This particular XT was my first machine with a hard drive. It's a 10MB drive, which seemed like all the room in the world at the time. (And I'm crowding 1.2G on my laptop today.) It came with 128K of memory, which I upgraded to 512K so I could run some basic office apps; IBM had the Assistant Series - Writing Assistant, Graphing Assistant - my first intro to graphics... a far cry from today's Freelance Graphics. But the XT was my first system that had graphics capability, and I wrote Basic routines like crazy to draw circles, use exotic colors, and even create fractal images, which had just come to public attention at the time.

PC XT in the Nineties?!!!

My PC XT still runs just fine. The graphics look pretty good, even for today, and overall it's a very solid machine. Maybe someone will figure out how to retrofit a Web browser for DOS 2.0!

If you have stories or pictures to share, please write me at denichols@ridgefield-ct.com.



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