Laser Magnetic Storage International (LMSI) was a subsidiary of Philips that designed and manufactured optical and magnetic media.[3] It began as a joint venture between Philips and Control Data Corporation.[4] It later became Philips LMS.[5]
3D rendering of the LMSI CM153 ISA CDROM interface boardCM 153: 8-bit ISA (coupled with the CM 100 and the CM 201)[26][27]
CM 155: 8-bit ISA (coupled with the CM 100, the CM 201 and the CM 210)[28][11]
CM 50 interface: 8-bit ISA (coupled with the CM 50)[29]
CM 250: 8-bit ISA (coupled with the CM 205)[30][26]
CM 260: 16-bit ISA (coupled with the CM 206)[31][26]
Motherboard-integrated
Certain Tandy Sensation models featured a LMSI controller PCB connected to the motherboard.[32]
The proprietary 16-pin LMSI CD-ROM interface was relatively short lived and existed on LMSI interface cards and a few ISA sound cards. These sound cards only have internal LMSI connectors, not the external DB-15 connector for external LMSI devices (the DB-15 on sound cards is the game port/UART MPU-401):
Sound Blaster Pro 2 CT1620
Sound Blaster 16 ASP CSP CT1780
Media Vision Jazz 16 LMSI
Pro Audio Spectrum LMSI
Pro Audio 16 LMSI
Generic 16-bit ISA cards with the Aztech AZTPR16 DSP (FCC ID 138-MMSN808)
Magnetic products were geared towards corporate mini computer environments (like the IBM AS/400):[33]
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^ abcdPastrick, Greg (29 October 1991). "LMSI CM 231". PC Magazine. Ziff-Davis: 336–337. ISSN 0888-8507.
^Sehr, Barbara (24 August 1987). "WORM standard debate breeds world of confusion". Computerworld. IDG Enterprise: 64–65. ISSN 0010-4841.
^Staff writer (July 1992). "Laser Magnetic Storage International Becomes Part of Philips". CD-ROM Professional. 5 (4). Online, Inc.: 115 – via ProQuest.
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^ abc"Produits en connexion directe sur port parallele" [Products in direct connection with parallel port]. SVM (110). Excelsior Publications: 276–277. November 1993. Retrieved 2 May 2022.
^Lode, Trygve (April 2001). "Weird World of Hardware". The Treehouse.
^ abcdRosen, Linda; Stephen E. Arnold (1990). Managing the New Electronic Information Products(PDF). Riverside Data. pp. 71–91. ISBN 9780962557705 – via Stephen E. Arnold.
^Quain, John R. (22 December 1992). "LMS CM225". PC Magazine. 11 (22). Ziff-Davis: 316–317.
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^"Philips CDD 522 2× SCSI CD recorder". Dutch Audio Classics. 2011. Archived from the original on 5 February 2011.
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^ ab"Du standard au marché" [From standard to market]. SVM (in French) (39). Excelsior Publications. May 1987.
^Staff writer (14 June 1993). "Pipeline: Shipping". InfoWorld. IDG Publications. p. 29.
^ abMichel, Christian (14 April 1990). "CeBit '90: »Meet the Experts«". JurPC: 557–562. doi:10.7328/jurpc/19905439.
^Mace, Scott (23 October 1989). "LMS Introduces SCSI Half-Height CD-ROM Drive with 64K Buffer". InfoWorld. IDG Publications.
^Steve (20 January 1998). "Philips CM 202". Very Computer. Retrieved 2 May 2022.[self-published source]
^"Les accessories du son et de l'image" [Sound and image accessories]. SVM (in French). Excelsior Publications. March 1992. Retrieved 2 May 2022.
^"Philips CM 207 CD-ROM Drive". Centre for Computing History. Archived from the original on 5 September 2009.
^ abcd"Philips/Magnavox CD-ROM Drives". IBM ValuePoint Collection. July 2018. Archived from the original on 6 July 2018. Retrieved 6 July 2018.[self-published source]
^Jueden, Shelby (20 August 2022), Philips CM-153 LMSI Reproduction Card, retrieved 28 August 2022
^Yau, Joseph K. K. (21 August 1992). "Help: Philips' CM 155 interface + CM 100 CD drive". Archived from the original on 5 September 2022.
^"Philips CM 50 (externes CD-ROM Laufwerk)". Planet 3DNow! Forum. 15 March 2008. Retrieved 2 May 2022.[self-published source]
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^Staff writer (20 May 1991). "Data storage". Computerworld. IDG Publications. p. 45.
^ abStaff writer (4 June 1990). "Data storage". Computerworld. IDG Publications. p. 37.