Olivetti M28

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Olivetti_M28 an entity of type: Thing

The Olivetti M28, introduced in 1986, was the successor to the Olivetti M24.It had an Intel 80286 CPU running at 8 MHz and 512 KB (expandable to 1024 KB on the motherboard) of RAM, featuring a 5.25" floppy drive and a 20 MB hard drive. The operating systems were MS-DOS 3.2 and XENIX. The computer had room to install three disk units, as opposed to only two on the M24. It was possible to install a 70 MB hard drive, a 80287 math co-processor and a enhanced CGA compatible graphic card capable of displaying 640x400 pixels with 16 colors (EGC 2413) rdf:langString
rdf:langString Olivetti M28
rdf:langString Olivetti M28, AT&T PC 6310
xsd:integer 69214902
xsd:integer 1120881100
rdf:langString Intel 80286 @ 8 MHz
xsd:integer 512
rdf:langString y
rdf:langString February 2020
rdf:langString Olivetti-M28.jpg
rdf:langString The Olivetti M28, introduced in 1986, was the successor to the Olivetti M24.It had an Intel 80286 CPU running at 8 MHz and 512 KB (expandable to 1024 KB on the motherboard) of RAM, featuring a 5.25" floppy drive and a 20 MB hard drive. The operating systems were MS-DOS 3.2 and XENIX. The computer had room to install three disk units, as opposed to only two on the M24. It was possible to install a 70 MB hard drive, a 80287 math co-processor and a enhanced CGA compatible graphic card capable of displaying 640x400 pixels with 16 colors (EGC 2413) The Olivetti M28 was rebranded as the AT&T PC 6310 by AT&T in 1987 and sold on the US market. It was available in France as the Persona 1800, sold by LogAbax.
rdf:langString MS-DOS 3.2, XENIX
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 3016

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