View allAll Photos Tagged ibm
CARUSO * 2 at work
Die alten Produktionshallen der IBM am Nahmitzer Damm werden abgerissen.
Hier stehen noch zwei Türme der Energieversorgung des IBM-Werkes.
Nach meinen nicht weiter recherchierten Erinnerungen, wurden hier ganz früher IBM Schreibmaschinen montiert. Später war es eine Endmontage von IBM-Festplatten, von der das zu vergleichende IBM-Tandemwerk mit den gleichen Produktionsstrassen in Mexiko war.
Ab etwa 1990 wurde die Festplattenproduktion hier eingestellt und nach Mainz und Ungarn verlagert.
Heute produziert IBM gar keine eigenen Festplatten mehr und hat des Festplattengeschäft an Hitachi verkauft.
Über die Zwischennutzung bis zum Abriss weiss ich nichts.
An der Tür ist ein Klingelschild zur "Sparkassen IT".
Es wird hier ein Gewerbepark entstehen. Der Aufschwung naht.
Ich finde die Gesamtfläche der verschwundenen Hallen gewaltig. Noch ist ein Vergleich über Google Earth und MS Vogelperspektive in LiveView möglich.
Guessed in the Guess Where Berlin Group by hcl!
Paper tape readers were pretty common on minicomputers back in the '70s and '80s. This one is rather different as it is designed to be attached to an IBM mainframe (I'd never even heard of mainframe-attached paper tape readers or writers before I came across this creature).
One of 12 people on the team who designed the first IBM PC.
Picture taken from the IBM Centennial Film via the Geek Feminism Blog
The top of an IBM 4758-002. This device is FIPS 140 Level 4 certified. Note the can on the front, containing the potted electronics that handle the sensitive cryptographic material. Also worth mentioning is the DE9 port on the PCI riser. This was the trusted I/O path for loading key material straight into the OS running on the device.
I think this is actually a PC/AT, but, honestly, my memory of such things has grown dim.
I have earlier versions of these pictures here on Flickr, but they're low-resolution. I don't know why I didn't post the hi-res versions.
IBM Marine Litter Digital Platform Proof of Concept Workshop | 9-10 March 2020 | IBM Centre, New York
Watson, powered by IBM POWER7, is a work-load optimized system that can answer questions posed in natural language over a nearly unlimited range of knowledge.
We are getting ready to decommissioning this guy here. Z10s are taking this sysplex's place.
Take a look at the cooling here!
The IBM T221 WQUXGA 9 MP monitor (3840x2400). Twice the resolution of the Apple 30", packed into a 22" monitor. The small window is a full-sized 80x24 xterm with font "fixed".
This building, designed for IBM as temporary offices around 1970 is now used by the Inland Revenue.
See www.fosterandpartners.com/projects/ibm-pilot-headquarters/
An IBM 1130 system which was the least expensive IBM system when it was introduced in 1965.
For more information about The National Museum of Computing , visit www.tnmoc.org
Please take a look at www.retrocomputers.eu for more info about my retro computer collection.