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Category Archives: PC history
Breaking Into ASOS
The OS/2 Museum recently acquired a Quantum Bigfoot TS hard disk in mint condition. The Bigfoot drives, as some readers may remember, were rather oddball late-1990s 5.25″ IDE drives that were cheap, slow, and relatively big. There was a sticker … Continue reading
Posted in Compaq, PC history, SCO
4 Comments
Well Hello
So after some furious disassembling, assembling, and linking, things got this far: It took longer than it ought to have because although IDA is great, I couldn’t figure out how to make it work with GW-BASIC’s bizarre segment usage. The … Continue reading
Posted in Compaq, Microsoft, PC history, Source code
7 Comments
How Old Is OMF?
The Object Module Format (OMF), used by most DOS development tools, and eventually displaced by COFF/ELF in the 32-bit world, is quite old. It is a somewhat strange format because of its age, and it is quite complex, both because … Continue reading
Posted in Development, Intel, Microsoft, PC history, x86
8 Comments
GW-BASIC Source Notes
When I learned that Microsoft released the GW-BASIC source code, I was mildly curious to find out what is or isn’t there. The short answer is that there’s a whole lot, but a lot is also missing. Spelling note: Both … Continue reading
Posted in Microsoft, PC history, Source code
20 Comments
PCLP CSD Hunt
Not long ago the OS/2 Museum acquired a boxed copy of the IBM PC LAN Program (PCLP) version 1.3 (1988) on 3.5″ floppies. The IBM PC Network Program (1985), later renamed to the IBM LAN Program, was IBM’s first PC … Continue reading
Posted in Archiving, IBM, Networking, PC history
9 Comments
Memory Trouble in Stormville
The OS/2 Museum recently acquired a genuine Intel DX79SR (Stormville) board. Together with its close siblings DX79SI (Siler) and DX79TO (Thorsby), these were the last “great” Intel motherboards, supporting the big LGA 2011 socket for the Sandy Bridge E platform—but … Continue reading
Posted in Bugs, Intel, PC hardware, PC history
14 Comments
386 Cache Coherency
I’ve been slowly chewing my way through U.S. Patent 5,724,549, titled Cache Coherency without Bus Arbitration Signals, initially filed by Cyrix Corporation in 1992 and published in 1998 (when it was utterly irrelevant, but such is the life of patents). … Continue reading
Posted in 386, Cyrix, PC architecture, PC history
18 Comments
OS/2 1.3 on a “Large” Disk
In response to a reader question, I started wondering how difficult it actually is to install OS/2 1.3 on a “big” hard disk, where “big” is defined as more than about 500 MB. In an attempt to reduce the number … Continue reading
Posted in BusLogic, OS/2, PC history, Storage
16 Comments
Emulating EtherLink
Spurred by the discovery of a pre-release OS/2 NetWare Requester from early 1988 with a very thin selection of drivers, several months ago I decided to write emulation of the classic 3Com 10Mbps Ethernet 3C501 card, also known as EtherLink. … Continue reading
Posted in 3Com, Networking, PC hardware, PC history, Virtualization
33 Comments
Another Strange 286 Board
The OS/2 Museum sometimes seems to have a knack for acquiring hardware so obscure that it cannot be even identified. One of the more recent arrivals was a seemingly typical Baby AT 286 board with an 8 MHz CPU. The … Continue reading
Posted in 286, PC hardware, PC history
27 Comments