Computer Museum
Follow Us On Twitter Join Our Group On Facebook Join Our Group On Facebook

Pure Energy - Web Design & Hosting
  

IBM Displaywriter

IBM's Office Products Division announced the Displaywriter in June 1980 as an easy-to-use, low-cost desktop text processing system. The Displaywriter System enabled operators to produce high quality documents while keying at rough draft speed. Users could automatically indent text; justify right margins, center and underscore. They could also store a document and recall it for review or revision, and could check the spelling of approximately 50,000 commonly used words. While these features are taken for granted in the post-PC era, they were novel for a time when most documents were created, formatted and revised on manual or electric typewriters.

The Displaywriter's "intelligence" came in 160K, 192K or 224K bytes of memory. Single diskette drive diskette units with a capacity for approximately 284,000 characters of information were available. As requirements increased, customers could upgrade to a dual drive diskette unit. Optional communications features enabled the Displaywriter to distribute information quickly over ordinary telephone lines.

A basic system — consisting of a display with a typewriter-like keyboard and a logic unit, a printer and a device to record and read diskettes capable of storing more than 100 pages of average text — cost $7,895 and leased for $275 a month. A system of three displays sharing a single higher speed printer and a paper handler sold for $26,185 and leased for $845 a month. The Displaywriter was not your father's Selectric.

Manufacturer: IBM
Date: 1980

Other Systems Related To IBM Displaywriter:

Item Manufacturer Date
IBM 370/138 IBM 30th June 1976
IBM 5150 IBM 1st September 1981
IBM 5160 IBM 1st January 1983
IBM 5170 IBM 1984
IBM 5155 Portable Computer IBM 1st June 1984
IBM 5140 Convertable Computer IBM April 1986
IBM PS/2 Model 70 IBM 1987
IBM PS/2 Model 30 IBM April 1987
IBM PS/2 Model 80 (8580-071) IBM 2nd April 1987
IBM PS/2 Model 50 (8550) IBM October 1987
IBM RS/6000 Model 550L IBM 1990
IBM ThinkPad 2523-710T IBM 1993
IBM PS/1 IBM 1996
IBM RS/6000 SP2 - Deep Blue IBM 3rd May 1997
IBM 8363 NetVisa Thin Client IBM November 2000

This exhibit has a reference ID of CH1102. Please quote this reference ID in any communication with the Centre for Computing History.

 

IBM Displaywriter

Click on the Image(s) For Detail


User Submitted Articles


Add Your Article >>>

© The Centre for Computing History - Computer Museum Registered Charity Number 1130071  Web Design : Pure Energy    Powered By SiteWise