The IBM System/360 was developed by a team at IBM led by Tom Watson Jr., who was the company's president at the time. The project was spearheaded by a group of engineers, including key figures such as Frank J. E. Watson and Gene Amdahl, who played significant roles in its design and architecture. Launched in 1964, the IBM 360 was revolutionary for its time, introducing a family of compatible computers that could run a wide variety of applications.
The release of IBM system/360 was on April 7, 1964.
IBM CPC was created in 1949.
IBM AIX was created in 1986.
IBM BASIC was created in 1981.
IBM Award was created in 1984.
IBM RPG was created in 1959.
IBM JX was created in 1984.
IBM SSEC was created in 1948.
The first ever DOS released by IBM was DOS/360 for their IBM System/360 series computers. It was announced in 1964 and first released in June 1966.DOS/360 has no relation to MSDOS or PCDOS for Intel 80x86based computers in the 1980s.
IBM Lotus Notes was created in 1989.
The IBM 360/44 had a clock speed of approximately 1 MHz. It was part of the IBM System/360 family, introduced in the mid-1960s, and was known for its advanced features for the time, including support for floating-point operations. The 360/44 was primarily used in scientific and engineering applications due to its performance capabilities.
C. B. Mason has written: 'Aelink - an independent program linking facility for the IBM 360' -- subject(s): IBM 360 (Computer), Programming