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Type | Personal computer |
---|---|
Release date | PC-X: 1982; 43 years ago (1982) PC-D: 1984; 41 years ago (1984) |
Discontinued | 1986 |
Media | 5¼″ floppy disk, hard disk |
Operating system | PC-X:SINIX, PC-D:MS-DOS 2.11 |
CPU | Intel 80186 @ 8 MHz[1] |
Memory | 128 KiB – 1 MiB |
Successor | PCD-2 |
ThePC-D andPC-X werepersonal computers sold bySiemens between 1982 (PC-X)/1984 (PC-D) and 1986. The PC-D was the firstMS-DOS-based PC sold by Siemens, though not hardware compatible with theIBM PC. It was slowly phased out after the introduction of thePCD-2.[2] Which featured an IBM PC compatible design.
Most of the hardware was identical. While the PC-X was equipped with 1 MB of RAM, a hard disk and a MMU, the PC-D came with 128 kB of RAM and a single 5¼″ floppy disk drive in its basic configuration.[1][3] More powerful configurations with 256 kB, 512 kB or 1 MB and either a second floppy disk drive or a hard disk with a capacity of 13 or 20 MB were also available.[1][4] The keyboard layout differed between the two models.
The PC-D had a certain level of compatibility with the IBM PC architecture but differed in a number of aspects:
Optional hardware included:
The PC-D shipped withMS-DOS 2.11[1][3] (version 3.20 became available later), which was extended with a menu system through which users could launch applications without having to use the command line.[1] Application software included:
Hardware addresses on the PC-D differed from those on IBM compatible PCs, causing applications with direct hardware access to crash, unless adapted (recompiled or patched). Clean DOS application would rund flawless, this includes all Windows and GEM programs.
The PC-X shipped withSINIX.