Difference between revisions of "ThinkPad"

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Until 1992 IBM used to refer to their products only by numbers. This was true also for the notebooks manufactured until then and the tradition of those numbers has survived in the form of the type-and-model numbers with which every specific IBM product is still referenced much more precisely than by its common name.
 
Until 1992 IBM used to refer to their products only by numbers. This was true also for the notebooks manufactured until then and the tradition of those numbers has survived in the form of the type-and-model numbers with which every specific IBM product is still referenced much more precisely than by its common name.
  
Rumor has it that IBM first intended to give the designation "ThinkPad" to their pen based computer 2521, which became the IBM ThinkPad 700T. But then they decided to extend the use of the name to their notebook computers and hence the first ThinkPads hitting the market in 1992 were the ThinkPad 300, ThinkPad 700, ThinkPad 700C and the mentioned TabletPC ThinkPad 700T.
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Rumor has it that IBM first intended to give the designation "ThinkPad" to their pen based computer 2521, which became the IBM [[:Category:700T | ThinkPad 700T]]. But then they decided to extend the use of the name to their notebook computers and hence the first ThinkPads hitting the market in 1992 were the [[:Category:300 | ThinkPad 300]], [[:Category:700 | ThinkPad 700]], [[:Category:700C | ThinkPad 700C]] and the mentioned TabletPC [[:Category:700T | ThinkPad 700T]].
  
 
[[Category:Models]]
 
[[Category:Models]]

Revision as of 11:28, 29 September 2004

About the name "ThinkPad".

Until 1992 IBM used to refer to their products only by numbers. This was true also for the notebooks manufactured until then and the tradition of those numbers has survived in the form of the type-and-model numbers with which every specific IBM product is still referenced much more precisely than by its common name.

Rumor has it that IBM first intended to give the designation "ThinkPad" to their pen based computer 2521, which became the IBM ThinkPad 700T. But then they decided to extend the use of the name to their notebook computers and hence the first ThinkPads hitting the market in 1992 were the ThinkPad 300, ThinkPad 700, ThinkPad 700C and the mentioned TabletPC ThinkPad 700T.