IBM System/370 Model 165
The IBM System/370 Model 165
were jointly announced June 30, 1970
as "designed for... the Seventies." That same day IBM announced the 370/195. They were the first three models of the IBM System/370 line of computers.
Since none of them came with virtual memory, "which was to be a hallmark of the 370 line", some said about these early members of the IBM System/370 family, especially about the 165 and 155, that they were not "the real 370 line."
Three months later a fourth IBM System/370, the Model 145, was announced.
Virtual memory
The initially announced System/370 Models 165 and 155 systems did not support virtual memory.In 1972 an upgrade option was announced "to provide the hardware necessary to operate in a virtual memory mode." Unlike the IBM System/370 Model 145, which as early as June 1971 included the hardware necessary to support virtual memory, and for which a microcode update from a floppy disk, adding support for virtual memory, was announced in 1972, the Model 155 and Model 165 needed expensive hardware additions - $200,000 for the 155 and $400,000 for the 165 - to add virtual memory capability. An upgraded 165 was known as an IBM System/370 Model 165-II.
Emulation
The 370/165, when equipped with the appropriate compatibility feature, with the use of an emulator program permits running- 7070, 7072 and 7074 programs
- IBM 7080 programs
- 709, 7040, 7044, 7094 and 7094 II programs.
Physical memory
Although the joint 155/165 announcement did not have the word virtual, there were multiple references to memory, storage, and cache memory under the name "buffer".The 155 had seven main memory choices, ranging from 256K to 2 MB; the 165: five possibilities, from 512K to 3 MB. Both models were described as having "a very high-performance buffer storage backed by a large" main memory.
Operating systems
The 370/165 supported both DOS/360 and OS/360. Being members of the System/370 family, the Model 155 and Model 165 were compatible with each other. Lacking virtual memory support, neither machine, as announced, could run a virtual memory operating system.IBM provided and supported the free operating systems DOS/VS, OS/VS1, OS/VS2 Release 1, termed SVS, and Release 2, termed MVS, and Virtual Machine Facility/370 on a 370/165 upgraded to a 370/165-II, exploiting the virtual memory hardware. IBM also provided TSS/370 for the 165-II as a PRPQ, while others ported 3rd party operating systems, e.g., Michigan Terminal System, Orvyl, from the 360/67 to S/370s with virtual memory hardware.