To say that Tandy’s TRS-80 Model 100 was an influential piece of computer hardware would be something of an understatement. While there’s some debate over which computer can historically be ...
LIFE.DO: Implementation of Conway's Game of life. Very slow. INPUT.DO: A subroutine that lets you edit a line of text with cursor keys, backspace/delete, etc. ESPRIT.DO: The start of Yet Another ...
Even if you didn’t own a TRS-80, the widespread footprint of Radio Shack in malls meant that if you are old enough, it is a good bet you have seen one and maybe even played with one. The games ...
In 1977, a decade after Charles Tandy acquired a company known as Radio Shack in 1963, the TRS-80 was born. Officially known ...
To learn how to use the TRS-80, this is a quick tutorial: https://www.classic-computers.org.nz/system-80/driving_instructions.htm The TRS-80 with boot to a "Ready ...
Don French, a buyer for the consumer electronics chain Tandy Radio Shack (TRS), believed that Radio Shack should offer an assembled personal computer and hired engineer Steve Leininger to design it.
Commodore PET and Tandy TRS-80, which were offered pre-assembled with a monitor and keyboard. The IBM PC, however, wasn't released for another four years in 1981. The "1977 Trinity" phrase was ...