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Core International

Core International, Inc., commonly referred to as Core,[1] was a multinational computer and technology corporation headquartered in Boca Raton, Florida, United States.

Core International, Inc.
Company typePrivate
IndustryComputer hardware and Computer software
Founded1979 Incorporated 1981 in Florida, United States
FounderHal Prewitt
HeadquartersOriginally Boca Raton, Florida
Key people
  • After sale:
  • Dr. Susumu Yoshida
  • Hajime Unoki
  • Yoshio Ishigaki
Products
Total assetsUnknown
Websitewww.sony.com

The company is now part of Sony and no longer exists as stand-alone identity. The company was founded in 1979[2] by Hal Prewitt as a technology firm to develop, market and support computer related products and services. They were best known for supporting IBM's first business microcomputers such as the 5100, 5110 and 5120. With the introduction of the IBM PC and PC AT, the company provided an extensive line of disk drives, backup and personal computer products. Core became very well known as a leading industry developer of disk array and computer data storage.

Many of Core's products[3] were the first of their kind, had no direct competition and were widely regarded for their superior[4] performance and reliability. Users and the computer press raved about Core's products. InfoWorld described Core's ATplus "is built like a Sherman tank, offering exceptional performance and reliability."[5] PC Magazine called them "Workhorses of Performance Computing"[6] and "High-quality construction..breaks the speed barrier for access times"[7] and asked "Will other manufactures follow suit?"

Core was known for their advertising and perhaps produced a few of the PC Industry's greatest promotions. The 1985 and 1986 rebate and recall Ad[8] for IBM PC AT hard disk drives. So successful[9] and controversial,[10] there was a rumor it was a topic at an IBM board of directors meeting. And the time where they gave away a free IBM PC AT when purchasing one of Core's ATplus 72 MB drives.[11]

Core remained a private company solely owned by Prewitt until 1993[12] when purchased[13] by Aiwa, which was a wholly owned subsidiary of Sony.

History edit

For business history pre-incorporation

1975–1980: Founding edit

The company was built on the early work[3] of Prewitt using his business and personal computer development experiences. This was the period during the creation of the first microcomputers, the launch of the Altair 8800 and founding of Microsoft. He was selling and programming Minicomputers and assembling these microcomputers, attaching computer peripherals, programming and building them into business computer systems.

Core was created under a different business model.[14] Initially, it was marketed as an association and structured as a for-profit organization specifically for users of the IBM 5100 Series and IBM System/23. The objective was to sell by mail-order computer supplies, pre-developed (off-the-shelf) programs and hardware maintenance service. Supplies included printer ribbons and paper, diskettes, tape cartridges. Software ranged from simple mortgage interest calculations, word processing, games and utilities to advanced payroll, accounting and industry specific applications. Users wanted readily available, simple to install and support for software that was also low in cost. Core was able to fill this niche because IBM had developed the machines with engineering and scientific applications in mind, while business programs such as construction, agriculture, and manufacturing were not generally available. Computer maintenance was an insurance program that provided on-site repairs and replacement parts, all provided by IBM service but at a lower cost than available directly from IBM.

The company was very successful[2] attracting users of the IBM 5100 Series as many IBM Sales Representatives referred their customers to the organization. While Core grew, profits were used for the continuing development of computer data storage.

1981–1983: Hard disk drives, LAN and PC for IBM 5100 series edit

These IBM machines had a closed architecture, with most of the design information unpublished and held secret.[15] Computer systems of this design are extremely or most likely impossible to have the ability to swap components, obtain support from other vendors or upgrade to better configuration/another model unless that option is available from the original manufacturer. The limitations make a customer dependent on one vendor for products and services for the software and hardware parts of the system.

Core sensed an opportunity to provide greater and faster computer data storage. After a five-year effort, in September 1982 they announced the availability of the first hard disk drives[16] and local area network (LAN)[17] for the IBM 5100 Series. IBM systems as sold were storage limited and without a network option; the 5100 had tape with the 5110 and 5120 restricted to 1.2 MB floppy disks. Core drives were available starting at 10 MB and increased up to 160 MB in removable and fixed configurations.

CoreNet, the LAN built into each Core storage system, allowed interconnection of up to eight IBM 5100 Series systems, providing the ability to share storage and data. This configuration pre-dated LANs of the period for the IBM PC and compatibles.

In 1983, Core introduced two major solutions as IBM was withdrawing from marketing the IBM 5100 series. First, software called PC51 that would run allowed 5100 series computer programs written in BASIC to run unmodified on the IBM PC and compatibles under MS-DOS. And second, a LAN card for the IBM PC and compatibles that provided connection to the IBM 5100 Series network. These solutions allowed IBM 5110/5120 series users to add new technology and increase productivity while retaining their investment in equipment and software.

Core's development of their storage systems, LAN and PC51 software was major technology engineering feat without rivals. Due to the complexity and the successful reverse engineering of the systems, resulted in captive market as they were the only organization able to provide an upgrade path for these IBM owners.

1984–1986: Educating the marketplace, IBM VAD, hard disk drives, PC and backup edit

In 1984, CORE expanded its product focus and entered the personal computer (PC) marketplace. The company's first product introduced the year before, called PC-51, was a completely new operating system (and language) for the IBM PC and compatibles. It enabled a PC to function like an IBM 5110/5120 system, demonstrating the company's strong software development capabilities. Not only did this allow users to continue using the application software they had already developed, but it increased processing speed by a factor of two to ten times, and reduced maintenance cost up to 90%.

This new product opened up an unexplored marketplace for CORE by allowing the company to become an IBM value-added dealer (VAD) and sell both the IBM PC and CORE products individually and as a combined package. IBM authorized and promoted this relationship because it provided an upgrade path for their customers that was previously unavailable. As a result of the early development effort for the IBM 5100 series, CORE released its own family of high-performance hard disk drives called the ATplus Series,[18] with better capacity, reliability and performance than IBM's drives.

A few weeks after the introduction of the new IBM AT in August 1984, CORE discovered problems in the factory-issued hard disk drive. As the media and marketplace learned of IBM's disk problems, CORE was once again in a unique position to capitalize on an opportunity, without any significant competition. For more than six months the IBM AT the model with the CMI was in short supply.[19] Delays were attributed to lack of drives, technical problems with the machine or some other undisclosed issues.

Core desired a major partner and selected Control Data Corporation (CDC) to assist with the introduction of the drives for the PC marketplace. The announcement[20][21] was made in February 1985 and generated a significant amount of press coverage.

Core discovered that a general lack of understanding existed among the news media and users regarding technology of different computer and mass storage systems. Few understood the value of different systems to the end-user or how to rate the many choices in the marketplace. In response, Core began placing considerable emphasis on user education, which resulted in a major contribution to computer industry. Directly from these efforts, the news media, computer magazines, product reviewers, dealers and computer manufactures started discussing, providing and promoting "seek time", "access time", "transfer time" and how to value or understand hard disk drives importance in a computer system. The company believed the more end-users learned about computers and the engineering behind Core products, the less these users wanted any other product.

Purchasers of the IBM AT were reporting some dealers[22][23] were installing inferior drives into the computer without disclosing the fact. To help buyers and for industry education, Core developed the DiskP program, later replaced by the COREtest[24] (DOS based), to identify sub-standard products by providing a visual demonstration of the speed and comparative measurements of hard disk drives and controllers. Many computer publications,[25][26] hardware manufacturers, distributors, dealers[27] and independent evaluation firms[28] relied on COREtest for product comparison, which made COREtest the industry standard[29] and most often quoted benchmark. As these programs were provide without charge and freely available from BBS, computer magazines and dealers, it is believed there was an installed base of over million copies worldwide promoting Core technology and education.

For more than two years, newspapers,[30] magazines and computer publications[31][32][33] ran stories on the IBM AT and Computer Memories Inc. (CMI) hard disk drives problems.

References edit

  1. ^ "CORE". Registered Trademark. Retrieved January 31, 2010.
  2. ^ a b . Florida Trend. August 1, 1987. Archived from the original on November 6, 2013. Retrieved October 30, 2013.
  3. ^ a b "Boyhood dream becomes a reality for entrepreneur" (PDF). South Florida Business Journal. Retrieved January 31, 2010.
  4. ^ Hard Disk Drive Survives Sherman Tank Test. InfoWorld. November 24, 1986. Retrieved January 31, 2010.
  5. ^ Reliability is Hard Disk Key. InfoWorld. July 22, 1985. Retrieved April 14, 2010.
  6. ^ "Core Hard Disk - August 6, 1985" (PDF). PC Magazine. Retrieved April 14, 2010.
  7. ^ (PDF). PC Magazine - May 1986. Archived from the original (PDF) on May 17, 2021. Retrieved April 14, 2010.
  8. ^ Mercedes Ad - Circa 1985. Core. November 4, 1985. Retrieved April 14, 2010.
  9. ^ Ad of the Year - John C. Dvorak. InfoWorld. December 16, 1985. Retrieved April 14, 2010.
  10. ^ "Company To Send Ibm On Sea Dive". Sun-Sentinel. Retrieved January 31, 2010.
  11. ^ FREE IBM PC AT Ad - Circa 1985. Core. August 19, 1985. Retrieved April 14, 2010.
  12. ^ "Japanese Firm Invests Heavily In Boca's Core". Sun-Sentinel. Retrieved January 31, 2010.
  13. ^ "Aiwa Co Ltd(Sony Corp) acquires Core International". Thomson Financial Mergers & Acquisitions. Retrieved January 31, 2010.
  14. ^ "Join Core circa 1980" (PDF). Core. Retrieved March 31, 2010.
  15. ^ "Definition of closed architecture". PC Magazine. Retrieved October 30, 2013.
  16. ^ "Save IBM 5110/20's from junk yards of the world" (PDF). Core. Retrieved March 31, 2010.
  17. ^ "September 1982 Core Newsletter" (PDF). Core. Retrieved April 14, 2010.
  18. ^ "ATplus" (PDF). Core. Retrieved March 31, 2010.
  19. ^ Waiting for the AT Train. InfoWorld. January 28, 1985. Retrieved April 14, 2010.
  20. ^ "Core, Control Data Offer AT Disk-Upgrade Kits" (PDF). Core. Retrieved March 31, 2010.
  21. ^ "IBM VAD Sells own drives" (PDF). Core. Retrieved March 31, 2010.
  22. ^ Dealers Pawn Off Inferior Drives. InfoWorld. March 10, 1986. Retrieved April 14, 2010.
  23. ^ Substandard Components Still Surfacing. InfoWorld. March 31, 1986. Retrieved April 14, 2010.
  24. ^ "Useful DOS Software". Joe Forster. Retrieved January 31, 2010.
  25. ^ Equity II Competes as a low-priced clone. InfoWorld. June 9, 1986. Retrieved January 31, 2010.
  26. ^ "Buying Computer Hardware" (PDF). Patsula Media. Retrieved January 31, 2010.
  27. ^ Borrett, Lloyd. ""Megabyte Tarnish," PC Australia, September 1985; url accessed March 8, 2010
  28. ^ "Patent 5295247". United States Patent Office. Retrieved January 31, 2010.
  29. ^ A User's View. InfoWorld. June 11, 1990. Retrieved January 31, 2010.
  30. ^ Bates, James (March 17, 1987). "Disk-Drive Maker Put Its Eggs in One Basket--and Fell". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved April 14, 2010.
  31. ^ IBM PC AT. InfoWorld. December 3, 1984. Retrieved April 14, 2010.
  32. ^ PC AT Problems Cause Concerns. InfoWorld. March 11, 1985. Retrieved April 14, 2010.
  33. ^ Drive Problems Continue in PC AT. InfoWorld. November 18, 1985. Retrieved April 14, 2010.

External links edit

  • Sony official website

core, international, commonly, referred, core, multinational, computer, technology, corporation, headquartered, boca, raton, florida, united, states, company, typeprivateindustrycomputer, hardware, computer, softwarefounded1979, incorporated, 1981, florida, un. Core International Inc commonly referred to as Core 1 was a multinational computer and technology corporation headquartered in Boca Raton Florida United States Core International Inc Company typePrivateIndustryComputer hardware and Computer softwareFounded1979 Incorporated 1981 in Florida United StatesFounderHal PrewittHeadquartersOriginally Boca Raton FloridaKey peopleAfter sale Dr Susumu YoshidaHajime UnokiYoshio IshigakiProductsComputer data storageDisk arrayhard disk drivesBackup softwarePersonal computersTotal assetsUnknownWebsitewww wbr sony wbr com The company is now part of Sony and no longer exists as stand alone identity The company was founded in 1979 2 by Hal Prewitt as a technology firm to develop market and support computer related products and services They were best known for supporting IBM s first business microcomputers such as the 5100 5110 and 5120 With the introduction of the IBM PC and PC AT the company provided an extensive line of disk drives backup and personal computer products Core became very well known as a leading industry developer of disk array and computer data storage Many of Core s products 3 were the first of their kind had no direct competition and were widely regarded for their superior 4 performance and reliability Users and the computer press raved about Core s products InfoWorld described Core s ATplus is built like a Sherman tank offering exceptional performance and reliability 5 PC Magazine called them Workhorses of Performance Computing 6 and High quality construction breaks the speed barrier for access times 7 and asked Will other manufactures follow suit Core was known for their advertising and perhaps produced a few of the PC Industry s greatest promotions The 1985 and 1986 rebate and recall Ad 8 for IBM PC AT hard disk drives So successful 9 and controversial 10 there was a rumor it was a topic at an IBM board of directors meeting And the time where they gave away a free IBM PC AT when purchasing one of Core s ATplus 72 MB drives 11 Core remained a private company solely owned by Prewitt until 1993 12 when purchased 13 by Aiwa which was a wholly owned subsidiary of Sony Contents 1 History 1 1 1975 1980 Founding 1 2 1981 1983 Hard disk drives LAN and PC for IBM 5100 series 1 3 1984 1986 Educating the marketplace IBM VAD hard disk drives PC and backup 2 References 3 External linksHistory editSee also Hal PrewittFor business history pre incorporation1975 1980 Founding edit The company was built on the early work 3 of Prewitt using his business and personal computer development experiences This was the period during the creation of the first microcomputers the launch of the Altair 8800 and founding of Microsoft He was selling and programming Minicomputers and assembling these microcomputers attaching computer peripherals programming and building them into business computer systems Core was created under a different business model 14 Initially it was marketed as an association and structured as a for profit organization specifically for users of the IBM 5100 Series and IBM System 23 The objective was to sell by mail order computer supplies pre developed off the shelf programs and hardware maintenance service Supplies included printer ribbons and paper diskettes tape cartridges Software ranged from simple mortgage interest calculations word processing games and utilities to advanced payroll accounting and industry specific applications Users wanted readily available simple to install and support for software that was also low in cost Core was able to fill this niche because IBM had developed the machines with engineering and scientific applications in mind while business programs such as construction agriculture and manufacturing were not generally available Computer maintenance was an insurance program that provided on site repairs and replacement parts all provided by IBM service but at a lower cost than available directly from IBM The company was very successful 2 attracting users of the IBM 5100 Series as many IBM Sales Representatives referred their customers to the organization While Core grew profits were used for the continuing development of computer data storage 1981 1983 Hard disk drives LAN and PC for IBM 5100 series edit These IBM machines had a closed architecture with most of the design information unpublished and held secret 15 Computer systems of this design are extremely or most likely impossible to have the ability to swap components obtain support from other vendors or upgrade to better configuration another model unless that option is available from the original manufacturer The limitations make a customer dependent on one vendor for products and services for the software and hardware parts of the system Core sensed an opportunity to provide greater and faster computer data storage After a five year effort in September 1982 they announced the availability of the first hard disk drives 16 and local area network LAN 17 for the IBM 5100 Series IBM systems as sold were storage limited and without a network option the 5100 had tape with the 5110 and 5120 restricted to 1 2 MB floppy disks Core drives were available starting at 10 MB and increased up to 160 MB in removable and fixed configurations CoreNet the LAN built into each Core storage system allowed interconnection of up to eight IBM 5100 Series systems providing the ability to share storage and data This configuration pre dated LANs of the period for the IBM PC and compatibles In 1983 Core introduced two major solutions as IBM was withdrawing from marketing the IBM 5100 series First software called PC51 that would run allowed 5100 series computer programs written in BASIC to run unmodified on the IBM PC and compatibles under MS DOS And second a LAN card for the IBM PC and compatibles that provided connection to the IBM 5100 Series network These solutions allowed IBM 5110 5120 series users to add new technology and increase productivity while retaining their investment in equipment and software Core s development of their storage systems LAN and PC51 software was major technology engineering feat without rivals Due to the complexity and the successful reverse engineering of the systems resulted in captive market as they were the only organization able to provide an upgrade path for these IBM owners 1984 1986 Educating the marketplace IBM VAD hard disk drives PC and backup edit In 1984 CORE expanded its product focus and entered the personal computer PC marketplace The company s first product introduced the year before called PC 51 was a completely new operating system and language for the IBM PC and compatibles It enabled a PC to function like an IBM 5110 5120 system demonstrating the company s strong software development capabilities Not only did this allow users to continue using the application software they had already developed but it increased processing speed by a factor of two to ten times and reduced maintenance cost up to 90 This new product opened up an unexplored marketplace for CORE by allowing the company to become an IBM value added dealer VAD and sell both the IBM PC and CORE products individually and as a combined package IBM authorized and promoted this relationship because it provided an upgrade path for their customers that was previously unavailable As a result of the early development effort for the IBM 5100 series CORE released its own family of high performance hard disk drives called the ATplus Series 18 with better capacity reliability and performance than IBM s drives A few weeks after the introduction of the new IBM AT in August 1984 CORE discovered problems in the factory issued hard disk drive As the media and marketplace learned of IBM s disk problems CORE was once again in a unique position to capitalize on an opportunity without any significant competition For more than six months the IBM AT the model with the CMI was in short supply 19 Delays were attributed to lack of drives technical problems with the machine or some other undisclosed issues Core desired a major partner and selected Control Data Corporation CDC to assist with the introduction of the drives for the PC marketplace The announcement 20 21 was made in February 1985 and generated a significant amount of press coverage Core discovered that a general lack of understanding existed among the news media and users regarding technology of different computer and mass storage systems Few understood the value of different systems to the end user or how to rate the many choices in the marketplace In response Core began placing considerable emphasis on user education which resulted in a major contribution to computer industry Directly from these efforts the news media computer magazines product reviewers dealers and computer manufactures started discussing providing and promoting seek time access time transfer time and how to value or understand hard disk drives importance in a computer system The company believed the more end users learned about computers and the engineering behind Core products the less these users wanted any other product Purchasers of the IBM AT were reporting some dealers 22 23 were installing inferior drives into the computer without disclosing the fact To help buyers and for industry education Core developed the DiskP program later replaced by the COREtest 24 DOS based to identify sub standard products by providing a visual demonstration of the speed and comparative measurements of hard disk drives and controllers Many computer publications 25 26 hardware manufacturers distributors dealers 27 and independent evaluation firms 28 relied on COREtest for product comparison which made COREtest the industry standard 29 and most often quoted benchmark As these programs were provide without charge and freely available from BBS computer magazines and dealers it is believed there was an installed base of over million copies worldwide promoting Core technology and education For more than two years newspapers 30 magazines and computer publications 31 32 33 ran stories on the IBM AT and Computer Memories Inc CMI hard disk drives problems References edit CORE Registered Trademark Retrieved January 31 2010 a b Hal Prewitt a computer whiz kid challenges the big boys Florida Trend August 1 1987 Archived from the original on November 6 2013 Retrieved October 30 2013 a b Boyhood dream becomes a reality for entrepreneur PDF South Florida Business Journal Retrieved January 31 2010 Hard Disk Drive Survives Sherman Tank Test InfoWorld November 24 1986 Retrieved January 31 2010 Reliability is Hard Disk Key InfoWorld July 22 1985 Retrieved April 14 2010 Core Hard Disk August 6 1985 PDF PC Magazine Retrieved April 14 2010 One Two Breakthrough The Core HC25 PDF PC Magazine May 1986 Archived from the original PDF on May 17 2021 Retrieved April 14 2010 Mercedes Ad Circa 1985 Core November 4 1985 Retrieved April 14 2010 Ad of the Year John C Dvorak InfoWorld December 16 1985 Retrieved April 14 2010 Company To Send Ibm On Sea Dive Sun Sentinel Retrieved January 31 2010 FREE IBM PC AT Ad Circa 1985 Core August 19 1985 Retrieved April 14 2010 Japanese Firm Invests Heavily In Boca s Core Sun Sentinel Retrieved January 31 2010 Aiwa Co Ltd Sony Corp acquires Core International Thomson Financial Mergers amp Acquisitions Retrieved January 31 2010 Join Core circa 1980 PDF Core Retrieved March 31 2010 Definition of closed architecture PC Magazine Retrieved October 30 2013 Save IBM 5110 20 s from junk yards of the world PDF Core Retrieved March 31 2010 September 1982 Core Newsletter PDF Core Retrieved April 14 2010 ATplus PDF Core Retrieved March 31 2010 Waiting for the AT Train InfoWorld January 28 1985 Retrieved April 14 2010 Core Control Data Offer AT Disk Upgrade Kits PDF Core Retrieved March 31 2010 IBM VAD Sells own drives PDF Core Retrieved March 31 2010 Dealers Pawn Off Inferior Drives InfoWorld March 10 1986 Retrieved April 14 2010 Substandard Components Still Surfacing InfoWorld March 31 1986 Retrieved April 14 2010 Useful DOS Software Joe Forster Retrieved January 31 2010 Equity II Competes as a low priced clone InfoWorld June 9 1986 Retrieved January 31 2010 Buying Computer Hardware PDF Patsula Media Retrieved January 31 2010 Borrett Lloyd Megabyte Tarnish PC Australia September 1985 url accessed March 8 2010 Patent 5295247 United States Patent Office Retrieved January 31 2010 A User s View InfoWorld June 11 1990 Retrieved January 31 2010 Bates James March 17 1987 Disk Drive Maker Put Its Eggs in One Basket and Fell Los Angeles Times Retrieved April 14 2010 IBM PC AT InfoWorld December 3 1984 Retrieved April 14 2010 PC AT Problems Cause Concerns InfoWorld March 11 1985 Retrieved April 14 2010 Drive Problems Continue in PC AT InfoWorld November 18 1985 Retrieved April 14 2010 External links edit nbsp Companies portal Sony official website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Core International amp oldid 1197607947, 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