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When I think of American IBM PC history, I think of button-down shirts, pocket protectors, and expensive but very well-built machines. I think “industry” and “productivity”—of machines with very little built-in capability for graphics and sound.
But in Japan, things were different. In a culture that seemed unafraid to embrace adult playfulness and creativity, many Japanese IBM PCs shipped in a wide variety of whimsical form factors and often catered to multimedia and gaming audiences. Unsurprisingly, these machines officially never made their way to the US.
Creativity differences aside, other Japanese IBM localization issues included smaller living spaces, the need to support a character set that required high-resolution graphics to be readable on a screen, and the fact that the Japanese were physically smaller people on average than most Americans. Each of these factors dictated Japanese PC design.
In the slides ahead, we’ll take a look at a handful of odd, interesting, and fun Japanese IBM PCs that were never marketed in the US. If you’re anything like me, you’ll probably wish that at least of a few of these machines had made their way across the Pacific.
1. IBM Personal Computer JX (1984)
2. IBM Palm Top PC 110
3. IBM PS/55E Green-PC (2000)
4. IBM ThinkPad 550 BJ (1993)
5. IBM PS/55Z 5530U (1991)
6. IBM PS/55 5530Z02 (1988)
7. IBM PS/V Vision Model 2408 (1992)
I hope you’ve enjoyed our little tour through these Japanese IBM oddities. If anybody needs me, I’ll be flea-market shopping in Japan.
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Source link : https://www.pcmag.com/news/the-strange-world-of-japanese-ibm-pcs