Olivetti M19

Olivetti M19 Personal Computer (with external I/O box attached)
Olivetti M19 Personal Computer (rear view)

The Olivetti M19 is a personal computer made in 1986 by the Italian company Olivetti. It had an 8088 at 4.77 or 8 MHz and 256640KB of RAM. The BIOS was Revision Diagnostics 3.71.

The M19 was shipped to South Africa with Two Floppy Disk Drives (360KB Format). A Hard Drive Option was made available later, which was a 5mb Hard Drive in an add-on case (later 10mb Hard Drive) attached to the LHS of the Computer via 4 machine screws. Paul Maynes, a technician at one of Olivetti's Dealerships in Durban, South Africa, HBH Computers, designed a Bus extension card with a 90 degree bend, that could accommodate a Seagate, 20MB full height hard drive controller card (Later 40mb HDU). This was a world first. The Second floppy drive was removed and the Hard Drive was installed in the vacant bay. The Bus converter was manufactured by SA Signals Manufacturing in Durban, South Africa. The Project Coordinator for Manufacture was Janet van Niekerk. Steven Beukes of Micro Distributors, Seagate's South African Distributors at the time provided the equipment for the 1st prototype.

See also

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Wednesday, February 19, 2014. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.