IBM compatible PC: Difference between revisions

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The concept of an '''IBM compatible PC''' reaches back to 1983, to a radical decision made by IBM when it introduced its first personal computer ([[x86]]-based).  IBM published the [[BIOS|BIOS]] (Basic Input/Output System) specification for their PC, and then openly encouraged other companies to build components for it, or even create an entirely different incarnation of the hardware which would run the same software.  Compaq, around 1983<ref>{{cite web
The concept of an '''IBM compatible PC''' reaches back to 1981, to a radical decision made by IBM when it introduced its first personal computer ([[x86]]-based).  IBM published the [[BIOS|BIOS]] (Basic Input/Output System) specification for their PC, and then openly encouraged other companies to build components for it, or even create an entirely different incarnation of the hardware which would run the same software.  Compaq, around 1983<ref>{{cite web
|url=http://web.archive.org/web/20050331034315/http://h18000.www1.hp.com/corporate/history.html
|url=http://web.archive.org/web/20050331034315/http://h18000.www1.hp.com/corporate/history.html
  |title=Compaq Company History
  |title=Compaq Company History
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</ref> , was the first non-IBM company to succeed in creating a completely IBM compatible PC.   
</ref> , was the first non-IBM company to succeed in creating a completely IBM compatible PC.   


To be called IBM compatible, a computer's processor must be [[x86]]-based, and all the hardware components must adhere 100% to the [[BIOS|BIOS]] (Basic Input/Output System) specification. Thus, IBM compatibility means ''hardware'' compatibility.  Beginning in 2006, [[Apple Inc.|Apple]] computer began selling IBM compatible PCs which run the [[Mac OS X]] operating system.  Such ''Intel-based'' Apple computers are also capable of running Microsoft's [[Microsoft_Windows|Windows XP]] operating system (instead of, or alongside, [[Mac OS X]]).  The previous generation of [[Apple Macintosh]] computers ran on the [[PowerPC]] platform, and running consumer-grade versions of Microsoft Windows (such as [[Windows XP]]) was not supported nor developed by Microsoft.
To be called IBM compatible, a computer's processor must be [[x86]]-based, and all the hardware components must adhere 100% to the [[BIOS|BIOS]] (Basic Input/Output System) specification. Thus, IBM compatibility means ''hardware'' compatibility.   


IBM's [[BIOS|BIOS]] (Basic Input Output System) specification was key to allowing hardware components manufactured by different companies to interwork.  Made available license-free by IBM in 1983, the BIOS specification described exactly how the operating system should interact with its underlying hardware.  Any company making a component for an IBM compatible PC was required to implement in [[firmware]] the appropriate BIOS calls for that kind of component, thus hiding hardware implementation details from the operating system.
IBM's [[BIOS|BIOS]] (Basic Input Output System) specification was key to allowing hardware components manufactured by different companies to interwork.  Made available license-free by IBM in 1983, the BIOS specification described exactly how the operating system should interact with its underlying hardware.  Any company making a component for an IBM compatible PC was required to implement in [[firmware]] the appropriate BIOS calls for that kind of component, thus hiding hardware implementation details from the operating system.
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==Further reading==
==Further reading==


* James Chposky, Ted Leonsis, ''Blue Magic: The People, Power and Politics Behind the IBM Personal Computer'', Facts on File, New York, 1988 (ISBN 0-8160-1391-8) A very readable and carefully researched history of the early days of the original IBM PC, based on extensive interviews with many members of the original team which created it.
* James Chposky, Ted Leonsis, ''Blue Magic: The People, Power and Politics Behind the IBM Personal Computer'', Facts on File, New York, 1988 (ISBN 0-8160-1391-8) A very readable and carefully researched history of the early days of the original IBM PC, based on extensive interviews with many members of the original team which created it.[[Category:Suggestion Bot Tag]]

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The concept of an IBM compatible PC reaches back to 1981, to a radical decision made by IBM when it introduced its first personal computer (x86-based). IBM published the BIOS (Basic Input/Output System) specification for their PC, and then openly encouraged other companies to build components for it, or even create an entirely different incarnation of the hardware which would run the same software. Compaq, around 1983[1] , was the first non-IBM company to succeed in creating a completely IBM compatible PC.

To be called IBM compatible, a computer's processor must be x86-based, and all the hardware components must adhere 100% to the BIOS (Basic Input/Output System) specification. Thus, IBM compatibility means hardware compatibility.

IBM's BIOS (Basic Input Output System) specification was key to allowing hardware components manufactured by different companies to interwork. Made available license-free by IBM in 1983, the BIOS specification described exactly how the operating system should interact with its underlying hardware. Any company making a component for an IBM compatible PC was required to implement in firmware the appropriate BIOS calls for that kind of component, thus hiding hardware implementation details from the operating system.

Notes

  1. Compaq Company History. Company website. Retrieved on 2008-03-25.

Further reading

  • James Chposky, Ted Leonsis, Blue Magic: The People, Power and Politics Behind the IBM Personal Computer, Facts on File, New York, 1988 (ISBN 0-8160-1391-8) A very readable and carefully researched history of the early days of the original IBM PC, based on extensive interviews with many members of the original team which created it.