IBM System 9000 keyboard and picture of unknown Model F
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System 9000 keyboard
This is one of the keyboards used with the IBM System 9000 Instrument Computer. This computer was interesting in that it used the Motorola 68000 processor and used a multitasking operating system (CSOS or Xenix). It was produced from 82 to 87
The keyboard is a variant of the Model F PC/XT keyboard. The cable exists the case on the left hand side and it uses a different badge. This example has a few other interesting differences. The cable has 5 conductors where most PC/XT keyboards have 4. The 5th conductor is where the Reset line was on the earliest PC/XT keyboards. There a jumper wire from this pin to pin 5 on one of the DIP-14 ICs. The Intel microcontroller is a ceramic DIP where most PC/XT are plastic. The data codes on the ICs place this keyboard around late '82 early '83.
I've added it to the wiki. wiki/IBM_System_9000_keyboard
The Unknown
In doing a little research it appears there were two models of the System 9000 computer; the 9001 "Benchtop" and 9002 "Desktop". This 9002 appears to have been offered with a Model F keyboard I haven't seen before. It has a section of programmable membrane keys above the standard key section which is configured with the standard PC/XT key layout. It also appears to have the tall legs of the F122. Here is are a couple images from some advertising.
This is one of the keyboards used with the IBM System 9000 Instrument Computer. This computer was interesting in that it used the Motorola 68000 processor and used a multitasking operating system (CSOS or Xenix). It was produced from 82 to 87
The keyboard is a variant of the Model F PC/XT keyboard. The cable exists the case on the left hand side and it uses a different badge. This example has a few other interesting differences. The cable has 5 conductors where most PC/XT keyboards have 4. The 5th conductor is where the Reset line was on the earliest PC/XT keyboards. There a jumper wire from this pin to pin 5 on one of the DIP-14 ICs. The Intel microcontroller is a ceramic DIP where most PC/XT are plastic. The data codes on the ICs place this keyboard around late '82 early '83.
I've added it to the wiki. wiki/IBM_System_9000_keyboard
The Unknown
In doing a little research it appears there were two models of the System 9000 computer; the 9001 "Benchtop" and 9002 "Desktop". This 9002 appears to have been offered with a Model F keyboard I haven't seen before. It has a section of programmable membrane keys above the standard key section which is configured with the standard PC/XT key layout. It also appears to have the tall legs of the F122. Here is are a couple images from some advertising.
- seebart
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Awesome thanks for sharing. That XT with the programmable membrane keys!
- Redmaus
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What keyboard is the guy in the beaker using?
- Khers
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Looks like the one with the funky membrane keys.
Not only does that one look like it has the legs of an f122, the increased incline of the case surrounding the membrane keys is also reminicent of the f122/104.
Not only does that one look like it has the legs of an f122, the increased incline of the case surrounding the membrane keys is also reminicent of the f122/104.
- Redmaus
- Gotta start somewhere
- Location: Near Dallas, Texas
- Main keyboard: Unsaver | 3276 | Kingsaver
- Main mouse: Kensington Slimblade
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I wonder if there are other model F's still out there that haven't been discovered yet?
- sharktastica
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Sorry to bump this thread up, but I think I might have stumbled across some evidence of part numbers for these from IBM's archives. Apologies if this has been shared on another thread before - I've been trying to find some better photos of the 9002 one for a blog post. If any exist.
#1: https://www-01.ibm.com/common/ssi/cgi-b ... ame=skmwww
#2: https://www-01.ibm.com/common/ssi/cgi-b ... %209000%22
The first link mentions the withdrawal of keyboard 4780898 from individual sale, which the second lists as the 9000's "Standard Keyboard". The 9002 keyboard is referred to as the "Hybrid Keyboard" but I couldn't seem to find a P/N for it but blind me might have missed it. Perhaps it was only available as a bundle with 6404360? It's most intriguing!
#1: https://www-01.ibm.com/common/ssi/cgi-b ... ame=skmwww
#2: https://www-01.ibm.com/common/ssi/cgi-b ... %209000%22
The first link mentions the withdrawal of keyboard 4780898 from individual sale, which the second lists as the 9000's "Standard Keyboard". The 9002 keyboard is referred to as the "Hybrid Keyboard" but I couldn't seem to find a P/N for it but blind me might have missed it. Perhaps it was only available as a bundle with 6404360? It's most intriguing!
- SneakyRobb
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Hi, I am waiting to hear back from the ibm archives about this board. I do find it very interesting and hope they can find some info. I have spent quite a bit of time trying to search for info about this keyboard but so far have found little. It seems to have been extremely niche, extremely expensive and produced very briefly while being offered at the same time as the much less expensive XT.
As well over its brief life it changed names and designations a few times which makes finding info about it confusing.
Here are some random documents/images etc about this keyboard I found with google/or in the wikipedia references.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IBM_Syste ... References
http://www.columbia.edu/cu/computinghistory/cs9000.html
http://www.old-computers.com/museum/doc.asp?c=623&st=1
This article is interesting because even in 1983 it appears that this computer was relatively unknown.
https://archive.org/stream/byte-magazin ... 9/mode/2up
Same advertisement as above but different shot at the end
https://pubs.acs.org/doi/pdf/10.1021/cen-v062n013.p017
https://archive.org/details/byte-magazi ... /page/n233
This is the same publication as above, but a nicer scan.
https://vintageapple.org/byte/pdf/19840 ... _Issue.pdf
Quantex apparently bought entire sets of this computer and made it into a image processing terminal.
https://lib.dr.iastate.edu/cgi/viewcont ... ntext=qnde
Similar-ish document
https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/stamp/stamp ... er=4055899
As well over its brief life it changed names and designations a few times which makes finding info about it confusing.
Here are some random documents/images etc about this keyboard I found with google/or in the wikipedia references.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IBM_Syste ... References
http://www.columbia.edu/cu/computinghistory/cs9000.html
http://www.old-computers.com/museum/doc.asp?c=623&st=1
This article is interesting because even in 1983 it appears that this computer was relatively unknown.
https://archive.org/stream/byte-magazin ... 9/mode/2up
Same advertisement as above but different shot at the end
https://pubs.acs.org/doi/pdf/10.1021/cen-v062n013.p017
https://archive.org/details/byte-magazi ... /page/n233
This is the same publication as above, but a nicer scan.
https://vintageapple.org/byte/pdf/19840 ... _Issue.pdf
Quantex apparently bought entire sets of this computer and made it into a image processing terminal.
https://lib.dr.iastate.edu/cgi/viewcont ... ntext=qnde
Similar-ish document
https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/stamp/stamp ... er=4055899
- SneakyRobb
- THINK
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- Main keyboard: KB-5161A, F122, Dc2014, Typeheaven, Beamspring FXT
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Hi,
Here is another image and reference to this board.
Page 8 https://s3.amazonaws.com/ieeecs.cdn.csd ... %2FmsrDBkg
Here is another image and reference to this board.
Page 8 https://s3.amazonaws.com/ieeecs.cdn.csd ... %2FmsrDBkg
- SneakyRobb
- THINK
- Location: Canada
- Main keyboard: KB-5161A, F122, Dc2014, Typeheaven, Beamspring FXT
- Main mouse: MX518 Legendary
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Hi,
Further speculation.
One obvious other thing to wonder is how the keyboard case relates to the Unsaver and the F122 keyboard. Obviously the large upper function key area is seemingly identical on the Unsaver/F122 .
For the Unsaver, aside from the plastic that divides the nav cluster and goes around the nav-T, the two cases look like they could be almost the same dimensions. The upper function-button area-outline looks identically sized so I thought maybe they either made the 9002 Keyboard case and then later modified it for the Unsaver or vice versa.
I tried looking into whether I could find any "early" Unsaver keyboards in publications that looked like the function area was repurposed from the 9002 keyboard. Maybe the early Unsaver function keys were simply put into the hole where the 9002 membrane module used to be with a rectangular cutout plate or have some kind of blocky outline etc.
It's just one, but I actually found such a picture. It is an early photo of the 3290 Terminal.
(*but I have no idea if the 3290 Keyboard in the photo just has some kind of raised edge for some other reason.)
From this January 1984 technical journal on page 2.
Full pdf
https://plasmapanel.grid.umich.edu/arti ... Issue1.pdf
website showing
https://www.semanticscholar.org/paper/D ... 7/figure/0
Now Im getting a bit nutty here but that cutout looks smaller *Larger than the function area of the 9002, but if we squint onto 2 of the earlier photos in the thread. It does kind of look like the top of the membrane module sits on the top of the angled function area. and the membrane module could be 1-2 cm thick.
Finally for today, by no means definitive this early IBM 5080 manual shows the unsaver with the same sort of outline of the function area.
http://chiclassiccomp.org/docs/content/ ... _Mar84.pdf
Further speculation.
One obvious other thing to wonder is how the keyboard case relates to the Unsaver and the F122 keyboard. Obviously the large upper function key area is seemingly identical on the Unsaver/F122 .
For the Unsaver, aside from the plastic that divides the nav cluster and goes around the nav-T, the two cases look like they could be almost the same dimensions. The upper function-button area-outline looks identically sized so I thought maybe they either made the 9002 Keyboard case and then later modified it for the Unsaver or vice versa.
I tried looking into whether I could find any "early" Unsaver keyboards in publications that looked like the function area was repurposed from the 9002 keyboard. Maybe the early Unsaver function keys were simply put into the hole where the 9002 membrane module used to be with a rectangular cutout plate or have some kind of blocky outline etc.
It's just one, but I actually found such a picture. It is an early photo of the 3290 Terminal.
(*but I have no idea if the 3290 Keyboard in the photo just has some kind of raised edge for some other reason.)
From this January 1984 technical journal on page 2.
Full pdf
https://plasmapanel.grid.umich.edu/arti ... Issue1.pdf
website showing
https://www.semanticscholar.org/paper/D ... 7/figure/0
Now Im getting a bit nutty here but that cutout looks smaller *Larger than the function area of the 9002, but if we squint onto 2 of the earlier photos in the thread. It does kind of look like the top of the membrane module sits on the top of the angled function area. and the membrane module could be 1-2 cm thick.
Finally for today, by no means definitive this early IBM 5080 manual shows the unsaver with the same sort of outline of the function area.
http://chiclassiccomp.org/docs/content/ ... _Mar84.pdf
- JP!
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Thanks for sharing all this. Now we have more questions than answers!
- SneakyRobb
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Hey no worries.
It is strange, I wish I could get one of these! I am basically thinking if the 9002 membrane is of a similar sort of size/scale to the IBM 3278 A02 upper button area.
As seen in monster toys restoration thread.
viewtopic.php?f=7&t=8515
Photos are Monster Toys
Its pretty blurry and not definitive but I think I found another image of the unsaver where the upper area is not quite yet to the finished smooth surface with the square badge that arrived just after and sort of squarish.
Found on this random manual aggregator website.
https://manualzz.com/doc/30878011/alpha ... -terminals
Does anyone have an unsaver and can take some images of the underside of the upper case around the function keys? Maybe by chance there are some artefacts or something.
Here is the other possible image of the sort of outline. Again, I have no idea why such an outline might be there, I am just investigating this for fun. Its kind of blurry, but it sort of looks like the same block/outline shape...?
- JP!
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OMG that clock is so cool...My dad has clocks like I have keyboards. He has old advertising clocks on all the walls of his shop. I never imagined our unique hobbies would cross but of course IBM used to make old time recorder clocks.
- SneakyRobb
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Hey I just came across your blog post on this topic. We seem to have had similar ideas, you should share your ideas here as well! I wasn't aware of this board until you bumped the post. Cool to see other people trying to figure this out. As well I think your idea of naming it "Escort Carrier" is a good one.sharktastica wrote: ↑14 Oct 2019, 19:56Sorry to bump this thread up, but I think I might have stumbled across some evidence of part numbers for these from IBM's archives. Apologies if this has been shared on another thread before - I've been trying to find some better photos of the 9002 one for a blog post. If any exist.
#1: https://www-01.ibm.com/common/ssi/cgi-b ... ame=skmwww
#2: https://www-01.ibm.com/common/ssi/cgi-b ... %209000%22
The first link mentions the withdrawal of keyboard 4780898 from individual sale, which the second lists as the 9000's "Standard Keyboard". The 9002 keyboard is referred to as the "Hybrid Keyboard" but I couldn't seem to find a P/N for it but blind me might have missed it. Perhaps it was only available as a bundle with 6404360? It's most intriguing!
- sharktastica
- Location: Wales
- Main keyboard: '86 IBM F Bigfoot + '96 IBM M50
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Cheers! It is nice to know my blogposts reach someone! But yeah, for anyone else curious, here's my thoughts from the other week about this keyboard: https://sharktasticallyshark.wordpress. ... -keyboard/. There's naturally a lot of conjecture, but I think my summary on this "Escort Carrier" is pretty solid all things considered.SneakyRobb wrote: ↑07 Nov 2019, 01:55Hey I just came across your blog post on this topic. We seem to have had similar ideas, you should share your ideas here as well! I wasn't aware of this board until you bumped the post. Cool to see other people trying to figure this out. As well I think your idea of naming it "Escort Carrier" is a good one.sharktastica wrote: ↑14 Oct 2019, 19:56Sorry to bump this thread up, but I think I might have stumbled across some evidence of part numbers for these from IBM's archives. Apologies if this has been shared on another thread before - I've been trying to find some better photos of the 9002 one for a blog post. If any exist.
#1: https://www-01.ibm.com/common/ssi/cgi-b ... ame=skmwww
#2: https://www-01.ibm.com/common/ssi/cgi-b ... %209000%22
The first link mentions the withdrawal of keyboard 4780898 from individual sale, which the second lists as the 9000's "Standard Keyboard". The 9002 keyboard is referred to as the "Hybrid Keyboard" but I couldn't seem to find a P/N for it but blind me might have missed it. Perhaps it was only available as a bundle with 6404360? It's most intriguing!
- JP!
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The "Escort Carrier" it is. I believe this is what happens when an XT and and an F104 have a drunken one night stand.
- JP!
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I just came across this unfortunately there does not appear to be a keyboard.
Also there is some good reading on Wikipedia on the System 9000.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IBM_System_9000
http://bitsavers.informatik.uni-stuttga ... felter.pdf
"The keyboard is almost identical to the IBM Personal Computer
keyboard, in fact, it is electrically inter-changeable. We had an instance
where a keyboard was giving us a problem, and we simply took a PC keyboard,
plugged it in, and it ran fine.
The second highlighted area is a 57 keys keypad that allows you, under program
control, to assign the role of those keys. You could write applications in
which there is no keyboard required. A user could interact with the
applications from the keypad. You can put overlays on top of the key pads and
label them for whatever is appropriate for the application."
Also there is some good reading on Wikipedia on the System 9000.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IBM_System_9000
http://bitsavers.informatik.uni-stuttga ... felter.pdf
"The keyboard is almost identical to the IBM Personal Computer
keyboard, in fact, it is electrically inter-changeable. We had an instance
where a keyboard was giving us a problem, and we simply took a PC keyboard,
plugged it in, and it ran fine.
The second highlighted area is a 57 keys keypad that allows you, under program
control, to assign the role of those keys. You could write applications in
which there is no keyboard required. A user could interact with the
applications from the keypad. You can put overlays on top of the key pads and
label them for whatever is appropriate for the application."
- sharktastica
- Location: Wales
- Main keyboard: '86 IBM F Bigfoot + '96 IBM M50
- Main mouse: Logitech MX Revolution
- Favorite switch: Cap B/S, BOX Navy
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Awesome find!
So at this point, we have confirmed the 57-key pad is reprogrammable, it was developed into the Unsaver instead of being a variant of it, and the actual keyboard part is XT/Set 1-compliant.
So, the video. The integrated-to-system touch panel the guy seemingly talks about at around 0:55 is what the escort carrier "hybrid keyboard" replaced. The machine in the video is specifically the System 9001 (as labelled in IBM's 1984 advert), but the label says just "9000" which means it was manufactured and sold before the System 9002 came out and IBM renamed 9000 -> 9001 in 1984. The keyboard for the early 9000s like this and the 'proper' 9001 would have been the so-called "standard keyboard", which was previously well-documented to be a straight rebadge of the Model F XT. Unfortunately I don't speak Italian, so I have no idea if there's information in the video to contradict or reinforce our deductions. Anyone happen to be able to translate it? Likely at this point, though, we've got a pretty good idea!
Thankyou SneakyRobb and JP for all this information to consider! When I replied early, I completely missed all of the gems posted before the one I replied to. Anyway, I've talked to some lecturers at my university to see if we historically used System 9002s, and if any happen to be lying about in storage. I've already been told there's a possibility, so I'm currently waiting to hear back!
- SneakyRobb
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- Main keyboard: KB-5161A, F122, Dc2014, Typeheaven, Beamspring FXT
- Main mouse: MX518 Legendary
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Hey no worries.sharktastica wrote: ↑08 Nov 2019, 16:24Awesome find!
So at this point, we have confirmed the 57-key pad is reprogrammable, it was developed into the Unsaver instead of being a variant of it, and the actual keyboard part is XT/Set 1-compliant.
So, the video. The integrated-to-system touch panel the guy seemingly talks about at around 0:55 is what the escort carrier "hybrid keyboard" replaced. The machine in the video is specifically the System 9001 (as labelled in IBM's 1984 advert), but the label says just "9000" which means it was manufactured and sold before the System 9002 came out and IBM renamed 9000 -> 9001 in 1984. The keyboard for the early 9000s like this and the 'proper' 9001 would have been the so-called "standard keyboard", which was previously well-documented to be a straight rebadge of the Model F XT. Unfortunately I don't speak Italian, so I have no idea if there's information in the video to contradict or reinforce our deductions. Anyone happen to be able to translate it? Likely at this point, though, we've got a pretty good idea!
Thankyou SneakyRobb and JP for all this information to consider! When I replied early, I completely missed all of the gems posted before the one I replied to. Anyway, I've talked to some lecturers at my university to see if we historically used System 9002s, and if any happen to be lying about in storage. I've already been told there's a possibility, so I'm currently waiting to hear back!
I would be inclined to agree with this. My personal/speculation theory is something like this.
They made the XT keyboard. Then they put the membrane function keys on top of the 9002 XT keyboard. Combining both of the keypads of the 9000/9001.
At the same time/concurrently they made the AT and the 4700, "Kishsaver", 77 and 107 key banking keyboards. The latter of which had the shorter spacebar now more closely associated with the model M.
At some point they realised the 9002 membrane function buttons were bad and thus replaced them with 24 physical buttons, basically taking the existing 9002 keyboard case and filling in the large function area save for the 24 buttons. Because this would require changing the PCB anyway, they basically used the 107-key 4704 minus the far right pad area.
The unsaver had a separate numpad/function pad as seen above, but maybe people wanted an all in one, so they modified the right side of the case to add in the numpad from the full 107-key 4704. Giving us the F122.
Then at a later date they trimed down the buttons, so if you see Model M122, the plastic around the 24 function buttons was reduced.
This is totally unconfirmed but this is my speculative theory.
The archives unfortunately was unable to find anything about this system. I did manage to buy a 9001 service manual on ebay which will arrive in a few days though, so that might help a bit. The archives though were able to get some sweet highe-ish res photos of the system! Will report back later.
*if I can get these to work...
- JP!
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I love these old photos. Does your university have any other pictures of other retro computer systems that they used to use?
- sharktastica
- Location: Wales
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Seems logical and perhaps the best family tree I've seen so far. The only potential issue that might invalidate our Escort Carrier -> Unsaver hypothesis is that one of the systems known to feature the Unsaver, the IBM 3290, was announced a year earlier (1983, Q1) than the 9002 announcement letter. https://www-01.ibm.com/common/ssi/rep_c ... index.html. The announcement is not specific about what the keyboard is other than stating an APL and data typewriter variant existed nor a concrete release date, but AFAIK the Unsaver was the only keyboard available for it? But then again, the Escort Carrier could simply have been planned for an earlier date?SneakyRobb wrote: ↑08 Nov 2019, 20:45They made the XT keyboard. Then they put the membrane function keys on top of the 9002 XT keyboard. Combining both of the keypads of the 9000/9001.
At the same time/concurrently they made the AT and the 4700, "Kishsaver", 77 and 107 key banking keyboards. The latter of which had the shorter spacebar now more closely associated with the model M.
At some point they realised the 9002 membrane function buttons were bad and thus replaced them with 24 physical buttons, basically taking the existing 9002 keyboard case and filling in the large function area save for the 24 buttons. Because this would require changing the PCB anyway, they basically used the 107-key 4704 minus the far right pad area.
The unsaver had a separate numpad/function pad as seen above, but maybe people wanted an all in one, so they modified the right side of the case to add in the numpad from the full 107-key 4704. Giving us the F122.
Then at a later date they trimed down the buttons, so if you see Model M122, the plastic around the 24 function buttons was reduced.
Anyway and to this end, I've been working on developing a tree visualisation of the development of Model F and M keyboards for a future website I'm building to replace my blog with and host information and resources relating to the Model F/Model M (and IBM/Lenovo ThinkPad) collection I'm growing. So far, I at least believe that the Unsaver definitely came before the Battleship. And both stemmed from the Beamsprings-replacing IBM Displaywriter Keyboard from 1982, whose almost-ISO layout was FAR ahead of its time and ultimately beat out the AT (being developed concurrently to the Escort Carriers and exclusively for the PC line) as the layout to develop from to make the standard Model M layout. And finally, I believe the 4701 keyboards were developed in parallel with the Displaywriter Keyboard given that the 4700 was really early '80s.
They don't AFAIK so far. We have a mini 'museum' of parts salvaged from previous university systems outside a lecture hall, including ancient drum memory unit, some PS/2 era stuff, and a really neato AdLib sound card. I think - it's been a while since I've seen it. No whole systems, though.
- SneakyRobb
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- Location: Canada
- Main keyboard: KB-5161A, F122, Dc2014, Typeheaven, Beamspring FXT
- Main mouse: MX518 Legendary
- DT Pro Member: 0242
sharktastica wrote: ↑12 Nov 2019, 21:22Seems logical and perhaps the best family tree I've seen so far. The only potential issue that might invalidate our Escort Carrier -> Unsaver hypothesis is that one of the systems known to feature the Unsaver, the IBM 3290, was announced a year earlier (1983, Q1) than the 9002 announcement letter. https://www-01.ibm.com/common/ssi/rep_c ... index.html. The announcement is not specific about what the keyboard is other than stating an APL and data typewriter variant existed nor a concrete release date, but AFAIK the Unsaver was the only keyboard available for it? But then again, the Escort Carrier could simply have been planned for an earlier date?
Hi I think this is a very good point about our theory and something to keep in mind before making any hard conclusions. I think we have a lot of circumstantial evidence that heavily leans toward ours, but that final nail in the coffin is elusive.
We know that the 5080 Graphics system also used the 104-key Unsaver keyboard, the annoucement of that product from November 1983, actually explicitly identifies a 104-Key keyboard with 24 function buttons.
https://www-01.ibm.com/common/ssi/print ... _locale=en
By May 1983, this 3290 advertisement appeared which shows our speculated membrane area filled in. It looks like the final unsaver keyboard. So I am not sure why the 3290 announcement just 3 months earlier doesn't mention the keyboard key count. but maybe they just didn't mention it for some reason and it was always 104 keys, or maybe they didn't know the final layout.
https://books.google.ca/books?id=BDAyLA ... el&f=false
As well I wonder if anyone has seen this before. It appears to be a promotional item from the 3290. As far as I can tell it's real?
Strangely it doesn't have the release layout and to add to the confusion it is dated March 1983. It has a more ansi layout vs the 3290 release iso keyboard. As a promotional item it isn't definitive but it is still curious.
Halfway down this page. It has a left shift, and a stepped enter. I believe that layout is still 104-keys if i recall. *but the 2nd row from the bottom is aligned with the one above it. Which is weird
http://www.chipsetc.com/ibm-internation ... age-2.html
Finally the wikipedia mentions the 9003 system as an industrial controller. I have found even less reference to this system than the 9002, but the few things I have found say that it has an 83 key keyboard and a 57 key function keypad, which sounds just like the xt+keypad of the 9000/9001
- SneakyRobb
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Hi, TBH the 9001 manual is not that helpful for our purposes. It is many hundred of pages long so I will scan it for the IBM archives and the community for our discovery of keyboard excellence.
- SneakyRobb
- THINK
- Location: Canada
- Main keyboard: KB-5161A, F122, Dc2014, Typeheaven, Beamspring FXT
- Main mouse: MX518 Legendary
- DT Pro Member: 0242
Hi, So I have scanned the manual and also sent it to the IBM archives. I am unsure if it will allow us to search for new terms but perhaps some new eyes on it may help. I have attached it here.
The keypad had LEDS. As well the keyboard can have faults that affect the D and G keys. If I recall that is a classic symptom of a misbehaving model f xt?
As well here are some images from the a manual that relate to the keyboard/keypad area of the 9001.The keypad had LEDS. As well the keyboard can have faults that affect the D and G keys. If I recall that is a classic symptom of a misbehaving model f xt?
- Attachments
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- keypad faults 2.JPG (53.54 KiB) Viewed 12071 times
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- keypad and keyboard.JPG (53.17 KiB) Viewed 12071 times
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- keypad and keyboard 2.JPG (45.83 KiB) Viewed 12071 times