IBM Kanji System
The IBM Kanji System was announced in 1971 to support Japanese language processing on the IBM System/360 computers. It was later enhanced by the support of IBM System/34, IBM 5550 and DOS/V.
General
The IBM Kanji System became available in a series of staged announcements. Its initial technical demonstration was done at Expo '70 in Osaka, and an official announcement was made in 1971, including:- IBM 2245 Kanji Printer
- IBM 5924 Kanji Keypunch
- IBM System/360-System/370 OS/VS1 & DOS/VSE Programming support
The IBM Kanji System was further enhanced in September 1979 to include:
Hardware
- Offline input/output
- * IBM 5924 T01 Kanji Keypunch - RPQ
- Online terminals
- * IBM 3270 Subsystem
- ** IBM 3274 model 52C Control Unit with Kanji processing functions
- ** IBM 3278 model 52 Display
- ** IBM 3283 model 52 Inkjet Printer
- Online printer
- * IBM 3800-2 Printing Subsystem
- Operating Systems
- * OS/VS1
- * DOS/VSE
- * IBM 8100 DPPX
- Development Languages
- * COBOL
- * PL/I
- DBCS support
- * IMS
- * CICS
- Utility programs
These announcements were followed by other announcements:
- IBM System/34 Kanji System, using IBM 5250 display
- IBM 3283-053 Kanji Printer
- IBM 3200 Kanji Printer
- IBM 3270 emulation and IBM 5250 emulation by the Japanese PCs:
- * IBM 5550
- * DOS/V
Competition and cooperation
Similar supports later became available for Korean, and Chinese.