Category Archives:PC hardware
ESDI Adventures
At long last, I got hold of a decently well functioning ESDI drive. From my earlier adventures, I had a WD1007V-SE2 controller, as well as an older WD1007A. The WD1007A (Compaq branded) used to live in a Hyundai 286 machine …Continue reading→
IBM PC 5150 Model Numbers
Recently I came across a minor mystery—the model numbers of the original IBM PC. For such a pivotal product, there is remarkably little detailed original information from the early days. When IBM started selling the PC, it used two methods …Continue reading→
Learn Something Old Every Day, Part X: The VGA Attribute Controller Is Weird
A few days ago I finally swatted a VGA emulation bug that I had known about for several years, but couldn’t identify until recently. The problem affected only Windows 3.1 running in Standard mode. It did not occur in Windows …Continue reading→
Learn Something Old Every Day, Part VIII: RTFM
In my quest to understand the intricacies of x87 behavior and especially floating-point exceptions, I pulled out my trusty old Alaris Cougar board. The system board had a 100 MHz Intel OverDrive 486 DX4 plugged in and worked quite well. …Continue reading→
IDENTIFY ESDI DRIVE
As previously mentioned on this site, the IDENTIFY DRIVE command in the ATA specification almost certainly first appeared in ESDI controllers supplied to Compaq by Western Digital. Since I have now finally secured a working ESDI hard disk, I could …Continue reading→
FantasyLand on VGA
In 1984, Joel Gould of IBM Cambridge (that is Cambridge, Massachusetts rather than Cambridge, UK) Scientific Center wrote a demo program named FantasyLand. This demo was meant to show off the capabilities of IBM’s brand new Enhanced Graphics Adapter, or …Continue reading→
First Dual-Channel IDE?
The OS/2 Museum recently came into possession of what may be the first adapter with support for two IDE channels… sort of: The adapter was made by Plus Development Corporation, a subsidiary of the disk maker Quantum. This particular specimen …Continue reading→
The Dual-Drive IDE Hell
I have perhaps inaccurate but very strong memories from my PC-building days (in the early to mid-1990s) that one of the most failure-prone and frustrating endeavors was trying to get two IDE drives working together on a single cable as …Continue reading→
How Not to Erase Data
From past blog posts it is fairly obvious that the OS/2 Museum occasionally purchases used hard disks. Most of the time, the disks are either completely erased (overwritten with zeros) or don’t have anything very interesting on them. But sometimes …Continue reading→
The IBM PC, 41 Years Ago
No, the OS/2 Museum does not have either a time machine or difficulty doing basic math. As of this writing, it is August 2021 and the IBM PC was announced in August 1981, 40 years ago. But in August 1980, …Continue reading→
