IBM Displaywriter Model F

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daedalus
Buckler Of Springs

17 Apr 2011, 21:11

So, I was looking through old IBM announcement letters, when I found this. In IBM's parlance of the early 1980s, "low profile keyboard" meant Model F, consequently I was like -

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So I made the long and perilous journey across the internets to find people who know more about IBM keyboards than I do, whereupon I was provided with these pictures -

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Asides from the German layout Ambra keyboards, they're the only all-white buckling spring keyboards I have seen. In some ways, it looks like a streched out AT (although it predates the AT keyboard by about two years) with the terminal style feet instead of the feet you see on the XT and AT with the knobs at the side. There's a pretty noticeable gap between the keys and the case that you can see in the last picture, not entirely sure what the cause of that is.

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webwit
Wild Duck

17 Apr 2011, 21:19

I like how they call it an ergonomic keyboard.

The red button is begging me to press it.

JBert

17 Apr 2011, 21:19

daedalus wrote:There's a pretty noticeable gap between the keys and the case that you can see in the last picture, not entirely sure what the cause of that is.
My model F AT keyboard has a similar gap, so I don't find it odd.

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daedalus
Buckler Of Springs

17 Apr 2011, 21:22

webwit wrote:I like how they call it an ergonomic keyboard.
Well, compared with

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I bet that woman is sitting on a tropical island somewhere, living off the litigation settlement from IBM from when her hands fell off after that picture was taken.

yench

17 Apr 2011, 21:36

Damn, back in the days they got toasters with their computers!

Findecanor

17 Apr 2011, 23:09

daedalus wrote:Asides from the German layout Ambra keyboards, they're the only all-white buckling spring keyboards I have seen.
They don't look "all white" to me. The darker keys are only slightly darker than the others, like on a Sun Type 5.

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daedalus
Buckler Of Springs

17 Apr 2011, 23:20

I think that's just dirt :p

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nathanscribe

18 Apr 2011, 00:44

Wow, you could park a bike in those drives.

Silly noob question perhaps, but what's the down arrow, located where caps lock tends to be?

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webwit
Wild Duck

18 Apr 2011, 00:52

My guess is Shift Lock, i.e. the same thing.

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snerual

18 Apr 2011, 02:36

Here's a Displaywriter ad that features the 'tall' keyboard:
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Brummell

18 Apr 2011, 03:07

I worked in a lot of IBM shops on System/36s in the 80s, that looks a lot like an old 5250 terminal except that they didn't have 8" floppy drives, of course. Those were in the system unit, which was about the size of a washer and dryer set.

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webwit
Wild Duck

18 Apr 2011, 03:11

The real question is, did they have the babes? I love those IBM babes.

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Brummell

18 Apr 2011, 03:19

My office had "Helen."

No, she was most assuredly NOT an IBM babe.

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daedalus
Buckler Of Springs

18 Apr 2011, 16:35

nathanscribe wrote:Wow, you could park a bike in those drives.

Silly noob question perhaps, but what's the down arrow, located where caps lock tends to be?
On German keyboards, the downward arrow represents a lock.

Beam Spring keyboards would have had Lock keys that locked into place.

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Julle

19 Apr 2011, 16:13

Sorry, I couldn't resist.
displaywriter.jpg
displaywriter.jpg (115.18 KiB) Viewed 6837 times

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snerual

19 Apr 2011, 16:21

The IBM twins.

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snerual

19 Apr 2011, 16:27

Image

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