On 2015-12-18 4:15 PM, Guy Sotomayor wrote:
On Dec 18, 2015, at 12:03 PM, Paul Berger <phb....@gmail.com> wrote:

The screen on the convertable is not plasma, it is a LCD screen and there where 
two versions one reflective and the other backlit.  In the PS/2 days there 
where suitcase size machines with plasma displays but they only had a single 
diskette drive that folded out of the front, one model is the 8573-P70.  There 
where 386 and 486 versions of these machines with microchannel card slots and a 
SCSI disk.

Again, no.  They did not ship with a SCSI disk.  They used the same disks as were 
in the model 50 & 70 (which were *not* SCSI).

A number of us at IBM (who worked on the SCSI cards spock & tribble) did fit 
the card (usually spock because it had 512KB of cache) and an IBM 320MB SCSI drive 
in the P70.  It was *not* a standard (ie orderable) configuration but at the time 
created a wicked machine!

TTFN - Guy


Ok I was thinking more of the P75, I remember seeing the same 320 or 400MB disks that where used in early RS/6000 systems in them. The P70, now that I check the documentation the P70, did in fact have an ESDI disk with the built in controller, a kind of microchannel IDE disk.

Paul.

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