Intel Inboard 386

Intel Inboard 386/AT and Intel Inboard 386/PC were 1980s ISA boards which allowed to upgrade respectively an IBM AT or an IBM PC computer into Intel 80386 machines.

The board was a full-length ISA expansion card that came with a 386 processor (16 MHz), an 80387 math coprocessor socket and 1 MB of RAM. 2 MB and 4 MB memory expansion options were also available. The board was activated after the regular XT/AT BIOS had finished its POST (power-on self test) routines and the OS had loaded the Intel DOS-based .sys device drivers (from config.sys).

Disadvantages

Some of the disadvantages of the product were:

  1. Though the 80386 supported a 16-bit ISA bus, if the Inboard were plugged into an XT, it was limited to 8-bit ISA expansion cards.
  2. If the BIOS did a slow POST, there would be a painfully long length of time before the RAM checked out OK and one could begin to use the 80386 features. The Inboard did not "override" the on-board motherboard BIOS/firmware.

Advantages

Other than that, one could actually run applications that just would not run on an XT. Some of the applications included: Ventura 2.0 Desktop Publishing Software (with Hercules monochrome graphics), Autocad 386, Windows 3.1 (Inboard 386/AT model only).

gollark: Well, docker can impose some kind of CPU/RAM limits.
gollark: rule four. muahahaha.
gollark: Another significant issue is that I can't actually conveniently autoprovision VMs somehow, so I would either have to:- set up docker- just have people upload projects and have me manage service files- do that?
gollark: Also network bandwidth, since it's on a 34/8 home connection. That's the main limitation, really.
gollark: Wait, how much disk space does this take? My server only has 1TB.

References

    How to 386 Your AT: Intel Inboard 386/AT

    This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.