Hence Zorro. Designed for amiga, rather than atapted from some second rate 8088 crud...
In regards to 8088, the ISA bus would be XT ISA (8bits) as oppose to AT ISA(16bit). 8088 has an 8bit bus while the 80286 have a 16bit bus.
There are three generations of ISA
XT ISA(1981) = 8bit (with 8088)
AT ISA(1984) = 16bit (with 80286)
E-ISA(1988) = 32bit**(with 80386)
**completing against non-backward compatible MCA.
"EISA systems also use an automated setup to deal with adapter-board interrupts and addressing issues. These issues often cause problems when several different adapter boards are installed in an ISA system. EISA setup software recognizes potential conflicts and automatically configures the system to avoid them. EISA does, however, enable you to do your own troubleshooting, as well as to configure the boards through jumpers and switches. This concept was not new to EISA; IBM's MCA bus also supported configuration via software. Another new feature of EISA systems is IRQ sharing, meaning that multiple bus cards can share a single interrupt. This feature has also been implemented in PCI bus cards. " - Upgrading & Repairing PCs Eighth Edition