Radio Shack introduces the exciting new computer for the 80s. Designed in the great TRS-80 tradition, the Model III is beautiful, functional, expandable, and afforable. Since memoy can range from 4 to 48K RAM, Model III can fill a wide range of needs. Your system can be exapnded so e...
"TRS-80 was Tandy Corporation's desktop microcomputer model line, sold through Tandy's Radio Shack stores in the late 1970s and early 1980s. The first units were rolled out to the stores the third week of December 1977. The line won popularity with hobbyists, home users, and small-busine...
On display at over 7000 Radio Shack Locations, TRS-80 Model I is a microcomputer you can see and try before you buy. It’s a proven system, used by business people, professionals, and “just plain folks” everywhere for accounting, education, lab work, budget management, word processing –...
Both are out there making replacement keyboards for TRS-80s — [Jay] for Models 3 and 4, and [Marcel] for the Model 1. Oooh, I said to myself. This is going at the top. A TRS-80 Model 4. Image by [Jay Crutti] via JayCrutti.comRelevant tangent time: I remember in the 90s ...
TRS-80 Color Computer (x2) TRS-80 Color Computer 2 (x4) TRS-80 Color Computer 3 (x4) TRS-80 MC-10 Micro Color Computer (x2) TRS-80 Model 1 (x2) TRS-80 Model 100 TRS-80 Model 16B TRS-80 Model 3 (x3) TRS-80 Model 4 TRS-80 Model 4P (x2) TI-99/4A (x9) Timex Sinclai...
You can find the complete source code at: http://sourceforge.net/projects/trs80/The following features are currently supported:- Model 3 (text mode only)- Floppy disks- Sound- Different keyboard types, including a tilt interface where the accelerometer triggers cursor keys (for games)- Define...
That string, surprisingly, would have fit just fine on my first computer, a TRS-80 Model 1. The Model 1 had 64-characters per line. But most home computers used an unmodified television for output. That many characters per line would have been unreadable on those computers, so they had ...
The TRS-80 Model 100 was introduced the same year as the Tandy 2000, but it could do stuff. It was a hard to kill modem-equipped portable that reporters continued to use for almost twenty years. It allowed them to “type a story, then send it by modem, all from a small box that ...
See games/colossal-cave Zeta BBS The BBS software I wrote starting in 1984, which set me on the path to starting one of Australia's first Internet Service Providers. The evolution was, from memory: Zeta RTRS (Stood for "Remote TRS-80") Zeta BBS (including Fidonet node 713/602) Zeta ...
80 to our big screen TV. It's kind of amazing when you think about it -- that computer is 42 years old, and I can connect it to a brand new flat panel display. My daughter laughed her head off at these "cheesy old games." She said something like "Dad, how could you guys ...