IBM Aptiva

The IBM Aptiva personal computer was introduced in September 1994 as the replacement for the IBM PS/1. The first Aptiva models were based on the Intel 80486 CPU with later models using the Pentium and AMD CPUs. All systems were developed in-house except for the later E series which was developed by Acer. The last system was withdrawn in May 2001 without direct replacement when IBM decided to get out of the home market. Customers were directed to the IBM NetVista, which was more targeted to business desktops. All Aptiva models included a modem and a standby/hibernation feature called "Rapid Resume".

Aptiva computers were typically sold as a bundle which included monitor, speakers, keyboard and mouse. First generation models came with IBM PC DOS 6.3 and Windows 3.1. Pentium generation Aptivas came with Windows95 and OS/2 'select-a-system' (PC DOS 7/Windows 3.1 and OS/2 Warp) on selected models.

Sound and modem functionality was provided on M, A, C and S models by an IBM Mwave adapter. The Mwave adaptor had multiple compatibility and performance issues and was eventually replaced by standard modems and sound cards. IBM settled a lawsuit for Mwave owners by refunding Aptiva Mwave owners a small monetary fee so that those owners could purchase industry standard devices.

The Aptiva never managed to recapture IBM's early 1980s PC dominance from Compaq, Dell, or HP. Among other things, IBM's development and marketing of Lotus SmartSuite placed it in direct competition with Microsoft Office. As a result, Microsoft "punished the IBM PC Company with higher prices, a late license for Windows 95, and the withholding of technical and marketing support."[1]
IBM wasn't granted OEM rights for Windows 95 until 15 minutes prior to the release of Windows 95, August 24, 1995. Because of this uncertainty, IBM machines were sold without Windows 95, while Compaq, HP, and other companies sold machines with Windows 95 from day one. [2]

Contents

Aptiva models

To understand which 'series' a Pentium-based Aptiva belongs to look at the first letter of the 3 character model number (so a 2168-M40 is a M Series). The word in quotes relates to the internal development name for the computer.

Aptiva machine types

The first generation of Aptivas used the 2144 desktop and 2168 tower unit form factors. The 2159 "stealth" series was a unique all black design that had the monitor resting on a metal stand with a 'console' located underneath which contained the floppy and CD drive. The console connected to the main unit via a 6 foot cable. Later in the production life, all Aptivas used tower unit form factors. Originally the 2144 and 2168 machine types referred to the amount of open slots and drive bays. Later machine type numbers did not have the same nomenclature.

User Groups

Quite a few Aptiva user and fan groups emerged. One of the most notable and tenured was run by Don Schneider aka - Don5408's Aptiva help. DON5408's. Unofficial Aptiva Support Site had many resources such as how to open the computer case (1), drivers, upgrade tips. The site included a user chat group on Friday nights to help each other with PC issues. The site was removed when AOL disabled web hosting, but some pages still remain on ptd.net (http://home.ptd.net/~don5408/case/). The site ran 4/4/1997 - 10/31/2008, bring in just under a million website hits on the home page.

See also

References

Preceded by
IBM PS/1
IBM Personal Computers