We told you earlier in the year about the trio of Brits who bought an IBM System/360 mainframe computer from the mid 1960s off of a seller in Germany, only to find in the long-abandoned machine ...
A non-IBM mainframe that runs IBM mainframe operating systems and applications. In the late 1960s, RCA's computer division produced the Spectra 70, the first line of machines compatible with IBM's ...
Following is the IBM mainframe evolution starting with the System/360 introduced in 1964. The IBM mainframe is the longest running computer family in history. Although current IBM mainframes are ...
But if you look at something like IBM’s mainframe Telum chip, you’ll get some ideas. The Telum II has “only” eight cores, but they run at 5.5 GHz. Unimpressed? It also has 360 MB of on ...
The IBM 360 is introduced in April of 1964 and quickly becomes the standard institutional mainframe computer. By the mid-80s the 360 and its descendents will have generated more than $100 billion ...
The System/360, introduced in the mid-1960s ... thirteen IBM 729 magnetic tape units, and an IBM 1401 mainframe computer. Additionally, the auction includes a trolley of instruction manuals ...
We hardly hear about mainframes in tech conversations. Yet, they remain the backbone for some of the world’s most critical ...
IBM has unveiled a more powerful processor for its famed mainframe systems ... With the virtual L3 and virtual L4 growing to ...
IBM is promising quite a boost in overall compute performance when its next-generation mainframe launches later ... for a total of 360 megabytes. In addition, the Telum II chip comes with an ...
The Telum II has 360 MB of virtual L3 cache ... This is absolutely enough for IBM mainframe shops to do some pretty serious AI within their applications and databases and within the security perimeter ...
From the System/360 of the mid-1960s through to the Kubrickian ... to the forthcoming Quantum Computation Center, located in IBM Poughkeepsie, New York, the historic home of the company's mainframe ...