NCR塔1632 – 过去的电脑广告
NCR Tower 1632 – Computer Ads from the Past

原始链接: https://computeradsfromthepast.substack.com/p/ncr-tower-1632

## NCR塔式1632:向大型组织转变 (1982-1984) 1982年末,NCR公司推出了塔式1632,这是一款基于摩托罗拉68000处理器的16位微型计算机,目标是不断增长的OEM市场。该系统的价格低于12,500美元,设计支持最多16个用户进行多任务处理,并运行基于UNIX的操作系统,提供高达1GB的存储空间。 此次发布与NCR内部的重大战略转变同时发生。公司开始专注于服务大型组织,这需要转向尖端技术和更敏捷的开发流程。NCR进行了重组,赋予工厂经理更大的自主权和完整的损益责任,从而营造了一种创业环境。 塔式1632拥有专用高速内存总线、对多种编程语言(BASIC、COBOL、C、FORTRAN)的支持以及各种通信协议等功能。尽管在竞争力上与AT&T和Plexus的系统不相上下,但1984年的早期用户报告强调了操作系统可靠性和磁盘性能缓慢的问题,这阻碍了其在具有先进功能的情况下实际应用。

一个黑客新闻的讨论围绕着一个链接“过去的电脑广告”([computeradsfromthepast.substack.com](http://computeradsfromthepast.substack.com)),具体是关于NCR Tower 1632电脑的广告。 用户分享了在1980年代使用Tower和类似系统(如‘iTower’)的怀旧回忆。这些机器运行rmCOS等操作系统,因其使用SCSI而重要,虽然按今天的标准来看内存有限(每个用户最多64k RAM),但在当时却非常强大。一位评论员推测,某个关键系统可能仍然在这些机器中的一台上运行,隐藏起来。 对话还涉及了技术变革的快速步伐,指出那个时代许多品牌和协议现在已经过时,以及一个相关的网站([https://www.1000bit.it/ad/bro/brochures.asp](https://www.1000bit.it/ad/bro/brochures.asp)),提供了大量复古电脑广告和宣传册。
相关文章

原文

I covered the history of NCR when I wrote about their PC4i system in 2024.

The Tower 1632 system was announced in the December 13, 1982 issue of InfoWorld:

NCR Corporation, in a move to capture an increasing share of the OEM computer market, has announced a new small computer based on the Motorola 68000 microprocessor. The 16-bit multiuser and multitasking computer is called the Tower 1632. It runs an operating system derived from UNIX III and provides data storage with fixed Winchester disk drives.

All the elements have been packaged into a 29-inch-tall cabinet that can fit under an office desk. The basic unit has a list price of less than $12,500. The Tower 1632 can support up to 16 users.

In August of 1983, Datamation carried the second half of an article by Jan Johnson on major changes at NCR.

The Dayton, Ohio-based company has made a fundamental change in corporate strategy. It is attempting to reposition itself, both in terms of product strategy and organization structure, as a company that sells primarily to large organizations rather than to smaller ones.

While that may sound like a minor tune job, the decision led to some major changes in product strategy and corporate organization. To compete successfully for business from large corporations, NCR’s executives determined they needed products with leading-edge technology and a nimble development and production organization that could constantly generate new ideas and get them out the door—fast.

The development and production side of the house was one of the first organizations to get hit by a wave of renovation. The main thrust was to push decision making down to the plant level. Plant managers now operate much like small company presidents, with profit and loss and R&D responsibilities, to name only two.

“The previous [management] approach involved a group of staff people who had opinions but no responsibilities; responsibilities were greatly dispersed,” agreed Hugh Lynch, vice president, general purpose systems, who reports to Buster, “What we are trying to do now is give production people a great deal of control without having to have committee decisions.” Lynch’s organization developed and produces the Tower 1632 and the 9300, a breadbox-sized mainframe.

“We are as entrepreneurial as we could become. That was the idea behind the new structure.” That is how Don Coleman summed it up. Coleman, who also reports to Buster, is vice president, CI/MEG systems (commercial, industrial/medical, educational, government). Coleman’s organization developed and produces the Decision Mate V.

Under the wing of each of the 24 general managers is manufacturing, engineering, R&D, purchasing, financial, MIS, and product management. In addition, each GM is responsible for developing a business plan and directing his or her own development projects. There is a great possibility for product development overlap.

So how does a $3.5 billion company manage all that independence? To keep a lid on wild and uncoordinated product development efforts, such as producing a product that does not interconnect to any other ncr product, there is a rigorous review system in place. Each GM reports to a systems vice president, who in turn reports to executive vp Buster, who also serves as a member of the office of the chief executive.

Buster is one of five persons who sit on NCR’s new top-level management team. Other members of the office of the chief executive are William Anderson, chairman; Charles Exley Jr., president and chief executive officer; Manuel Garcia, executive vice president responsible for marketing and sales; and Don Herman, executive vice president (and founder of what is now NCR/Comten Inc.), responsible for integrated systems, basically those business units that are self-contained or don’t fit well anywhere else. Herman’s realm includes NCR/Comten, NCR/Telecom, Applied Digital Data Systems, micrographics, and the office systems division.

Auerbach Publishers compiled two volumes covering all available hardware and software. Here is the information they had for the Tower 1632:

Overview The NCR Tower 1632 is a multifunction, multitasking microcomputer system intended for the OEM market. The system is contained in a 29-inch-high cabinet, which can fit under an office desk, and supports word processing, data communications, electronic mail, and scientific applications.

The Tower 1632 is supported by NCR field engineering organizations in over 1,200 cities worldwide. Its self-diagnostic capabilities give users the option of maintaining their own systems.

System Design The NCR Tower 1632 features the 16-bit Motorola MC 68000 processor, supporting up to 6 microprocessor-based controllers. Main memory ranges from 256KB to 2MB, in increments of 256KB. The industry-standard IEEE-796 I/O interface and separate dedicated high-speed memory bus operate simultaneously and independently, limiting bus contention and increasing throughput speed. The Tower 1632 can support up to 1GB of disk storage.

The UNIX operating system from AT&T, enhanced by NCR, provides the Tower 1632 with flexibility and compatibility. Applications programs can be created with the N-GEN applications generator. Supported programming languages include Business BASIC, COBOL, C, and FORTRAN.

A typical configuration for the Tower 1632 includes the processor, 512KB of ECC memory, a battery backup unit, 1MB of diskette storage, a 32MB Winchester disk drive, 81/0 ports, and the UNIX operating system.

Available communications capabilities include RS-232C, ASCII-TTY, NCR DLC, IBM 2780/3780 and SDLA/SNA, X.21/X.25, and UNIX networking.

Winchester disks, diskette drives, and streaming magnetic tape provide additional Tower 1632 mass storage options.

Competition & Pricing The NCR Tower 1632 competes with the AT&T 3B2/300, Plexus Computers P/35, and Pertec Computer SYSTEM 3200.

联系我们 contact @ memedata.com