As part of a three-pronged strategy against
IBM, the company released this model in 1982 at the same time as the
PDP-11-based
PRO-350 and the
Intel 8088-based
Rainbow 100. The DECmate II resembles the Rainbow 100 but uses the 6120 processor. Its two operating systems are the
WPS-8 word processing system, and the
COS-310 Commercial Operating System running
DIBOL. Like the others it had a monochrome VR201 (
VT220-style) monitor, an
LK201 keyboard and dual 400 KB single-sided quad-density 5.25-inch RX50
floppy disk drives. It had 32 Kwords of RAM for use by programs, and a further 32 Kwords containing code which was used for device emulation. Code running in this second bank was nicknamed "slushware", in contrast to
firmware since it was loaded from floppy disk as the machine booted. It was also known as the PC278. The model could be expanded, either by adding another pair of 5.25-inch floppy disk drives, and it could also support either an additional pair of RX01 or RX02 8-inch floppy disk drives or a
Winchester disk. It can also have a coprocessor board added, to allow it to run
CP/M. There was a choice of three coprocessor boards, one with a
Z80 and 64 KB RAM, and a choice of two boards with both a Z80 and an
Intel 8086, the difference being that they had either 256 KB or 512 KB RAM. Manufacture ceased in 1986. It was superseded by the DECmate III, introduced in 1984. == DECmate III ==