What are you looking for ?
Infinidat
Articles_top

History (1970): IBM Plug Compatible Failures

Some manufacturers never shipped products.

This article was published by WikiFoundry.

1970’s IBM Plug Compatible Failures

A number of companies entered the 2314 and 3330 plug compatible market with big intentions and spending many R&D dollars.

IBM 3330

Some never shipped a product. This entry catalogs those that tried to bring a product to market regardless of their success. The list is limited to drive manufacturers, pure financial companies such as Transamerica are not included in this first list.
• Ampex (Taxon->Clasco->Ampex) (2314, 3330)
• Burroughs
• BuCode
• Century Data Systems/Calcomp (2314, 3330)
• Control Data Corp (2314-3380)
• Fujitsu
• ISS, then Itel, then Sperry Univac (2314, 3330)
• Intercomp
• Memorex (231- 3380)
• Marshall Data Systems (2314)
• Nippon Peripherals (3340)
• Peripherals General
• Potter Instruments (2314)
• Singer
• StorageTek via acquisition of SuperDisk (3330-3380)
• Texas Instruments
• Tracor
• Varian

Some pure financial companies were:
• Greyhound
• Itel prior to its acquisition of ISS
• Telex
• Transamerica

IBM’s responses to its plug compatible competition was the subject of a number of anti-trust lawsuits, most of which IBM won. The US government’s 1969 antitrust lawsuit was amended to include IBM’s interface manipulations as an anti-trust violation but the entire lawsuit was dropped in 1982 by the Regan administration. A similar European Union complaint was settled with IBM changing its practices to provide improved disclosure of it’s product’s interfaces.

Control Data, Fujitsu, Memorex and Storage Technology continued into the 1980s, but all ultimately exited the PCM disk subsystem’s business.

Articles_bottom
AIC
ATTO
OPEN-E