You will find an article for your exact part or computer here by catalog number. First you have to narrow down your search.
* NEWS: Recent Changes to the Category:TRS-80 Pages
* TRS-80 Hardware
* TRS-80 Software
* TRS-80 Documentation
* TRS-80 Catalog Numbers
Attributes | Values |
---|
rdfs:label
| |
rdfs:comment
| - You will find an article for your exact part or computer here by catalog number. First you have to narrow down your search.
* NEWS: Recent Changes to the Category:TRS-80 Pages
* TRS-80 Hardware
* TRS-80 Software
* TRS-80 Documentation
* TRS-80 Catalog Numbers
- The TRS-80 is a series of computers produced by Tandy (aka Radio Shack) from 1977 to 1981. It is part of the "1977 trinity" - the first commercially successful personal computers, along with the Apple II and the Commodore PET. Its low cost and wide availability made it very popular, and at a point it had the largest software library of any personal computer. This article is a . You can help My English Wiki by expanding it.
- The other big brand-name home computer of the late 1970s, besides the Apple II and the VIC 20. The TRS-80 -- short for Tandy Radio Shack Z-80 -- was Radio Shack's entry into the consumer microcomputer market. The first version offered, known as the Model 1, had a black-and-white display with character mode graphics, and could not support a disk drive or more than 16K of memory without adding on a special "expansion interface" that normally sat beneath the monitor.
|
sameAs
| |
dcterms:subject
| |
dbkwik:all-the-tro...iPageUsesTemplate
| |
dbkwik:allthetrope...iPageUsesTemplate
| |
dbkwik:scratch-pad...iPageUsesTemplate
| |
dbkwik:scratchpad/...iPageUsesTemplate
| |
dbkwik:vsrecommend...iPageUsesTemplate
| |
abstract
| - The other big brand-name home computer of the late 1970s, besides the Apple II and the VIC 20. The TRS-80 -- short for Tandy Radio Shack Z-80 -- was Radio Shack's entry into the consumer microcomputer market. The first version offered, known as the Model 1, had a black-and-white display with character mode graphics, and could not support a disk drive or more than 16K of memory without adding on a special "expansion interface" that normally sat beneath the monitor. Since the keyboard was built into the CPU cabinet -- indeed, in the case of the Model 1, the keyboard was the CPU cabinet -- it was impossible to change out your keyboard if it went bad. This made the keyboard's susceptibility to "keybounce" paarticcullarlllly annnnoyyyingg. This and other "features", such as the absymally low resolution graphics, led many of its detractors to refer to the computer as the TRaSh-80.
- You will find an article for your exact part or computer here by catalog number. First you have to narrow down your search.
* NEWS: Recent Changes to the Category:TRS-80 Pages
* TRS-80 Hardware
* TRS-80 Software
* TRS-80 Documentation
* TRS-80 Catalog Numbers
- The TRS-80 is a series of computers produced by Tandy (aka Radio Shack) from 1977 to 1981. It is part of the "1977 trinity" - the first commercially successful personal computers, along with the Apple II and the Commodore PET. Its low cost and wide availability made it very popular, and at a point it had the largest software library of any personal computer. This article is a . You can help My English Wiki by expanding it.
|