sharktastica wrote: 08 Nov 2019, 16:24
JP! wrote: 08 Nov 2019, 15:49
I just came across this unfortunately there does not appear to be a keyboard.
Awesome find!
So at this point, we have confirmed the 57-key pad is reprogrammable, it was developed into the Unsaver instead of being a variant of it, and the actual keyboard part is XT/Set 1-compliant.
So, the video. The integrated-to-system touch panel the guy seemingly talks about at around 0:55 is what the escort carrier "hybrid keyboard" replaced. The machine in the video is specifically the System 9001 (as labelled in IBM's 1984 advert), but the label says just "9000" which means it was manufactured and sold before the System 9002 came out and IBM renamed 9000 -> 9001 in 1984. The keyboard for the early 9000s like this and the 'proper' 9001 would have been the so-called "standard keyboard", which was previously well-documented to be a straight rebadge of the Model F XT. Unfortunately I don't speak Italian, so I have no idea if there's information in the video to contradict or reinforce our deductions. Anyone happen to be able to translate it? Likely at this point, though, we've got a pretty good idea!
Thankyou SneakyRobb and JP for all this information to consider! When I replied early, I completely missed all of the gems posted before the one I replied to. Anyway, I've talked to some lecturers at my university to see if we historically used System 9002s, and if any happen to be lying about in storage. I've already been told there's a possibility, so I'm currently waiting to hear back!
Hey no worries.
I would be inclined to agree with this. My personal/speculation theory is something like this.
They made the XT keyboard. Then they put the membrane function keys on top of the 9002 XT keyboard. Combining both of the keypads of the 9000/9001.
At the same time/concurrently they made the AT and the 4700, "Kishsaver", 77 and 107 key banking keyboards. The latter of which had the shorter spacebar now more closely associated with the model M.
At some point they realised the 9002 membrane function buttons were bad and thus replaced them with 24 physical buttons, basically taking the existing 9002 keyboard case and filling in the large function area save for the 24 buttons. Because this would require changing the PCB anyway, they basically used the 107-key 4704 minus the far right pad area.
The unsaver had a separate numpad/function pad as seen above, but maybe people wanted an all in one, so they modified the right side of the case to add in the numpad from the full 107-key 4704. Giving us the F122.
Then at a later date they trimed down the buttons, so if you see Model M122, the plastic around the 24 function buttons was reduced.
This is totally unconfirmed but this is my speculative theory.
The archives unfortunately was unable to find anything about this system. I did manage to buy a 9001 service manual on ebay which will arrive in a few days though, so that might help a bit. The archives though were able to get some sweet highe-ish res photos of the system! Will report back later.
*if I can get these to work...

- 1984_IBM 9002 Desk Top Computer_I01_1-9-E-7_b120_f9.jpg (46.71 KiB) Viewed 13925 times

- 1984_IBM 9002 Desk Top Computer_I02_1-9-E-7_b120_f9.jpg (45.53 KiB) Viewed 13925 times

- 1984_IBM 9002 Desk Top Computer_I03_1-9-E-7_b120_f9.jpg (39.95 KiB) Viewed 13925 times

- 1984_IBM 9002 Desk Top Computer_I01_1-9-E-7_b120_f9.tif (2.29 MiB) Viewed 13929 times

- 1984_IBM 9002 Desk Top Computer_I02_1-9-E-7_b120_f9.tif (2.38 MiB) Viewed 13929 times

- 1984_IBM 9002 Desk Top Computer_I03_1-9-E-7_b120_f9.tif (1.92 MiB) Viewed 13929 times