80 Microcomputing
80 Microcomputing, also known as 80 Micro, was the most famous of the TRS-80 magazines and the magazine people tend to remember most. It was the first of the platform-specific computer magazines to become very popular, creating a model that many other magazines followed. Harry McCracken, former editor-in-chief of PC World, described PC World as “essentially an 80 Micro clone that happened to be about Windows, not TRS-80s”.
80 Microcomputing lasted for 101 issues, plus one special anniversary issue. The first issue was published in January 1980 and the final in June 1988 (although TRS-80 coverage was dropped starting with January 1988). With the combined June/July 1982 issue, 80 Microcomputing was renamed to 80 Micro and the cover date was advanced one month.
The magazine was very successful and spawned:
- a spinoff magazine for the Color Computer (Hot Coco)
- a ten-volume series of books (The Encyclopedia of the TRS-80)
- a book of extra material (The Rest of 80)
- a book of reviews (80 Micro’s Review Guide)
Wayne Green created 80 Microcomputing as an offshoot of Kilobaud Microcomputing, a computer magazine that he started in January 1977. 80 Microcomputing originally covered only the original TRS-80 (the Model I), but later expanded its coverage to include additional computer models after they were introduced. In all, the magazine covered (although not all at the same time) the Model I/III/4, Model 100, Color Computer 1/2, Model II/12/16, Model 2000, and the Model 1000 series.
At its height in 1982, 80 Microcomputing was the third largest magazine in the country. Only Vogue and Byte were larger. The largest ever regular issue was November 1982 at 518 pages. The special Anniversary issue published a few months later was 594 pages. The ratio of editorial pages to advertising pages remained roughly equal, so these issues contained around 250 pages of advertising. This large number of advertising pages demonstrated the vibrancy of the TRS-80 market, and many of those advertisements remain interesting today.
Over its long run, 80 Microcomputing contained many well remembered columns including:
- 80 Applications by Dennis Kitsz
- Kitchen Table Software by David Busch
- The Assembly Line by William Barden, Jr.
- The Next Step by Hardin Brothers
- Fun House by Richard Ramella
- Feedback Loop by Terry Kepner
- The Gamer’s Cafe by “Rodney Gambicus”
- Commander 80 by Jake Commander
Starting in August 1983, the Color Computer content was moved to the recently spun off Hot Coco magazine. Coverage of the Model II/12/16 quietly disappeared at about the same time. After Hot Coco stopped publishing a few years later, some of the Color Computer content moved back into 80 Micro in the March 1986 issue and continued until December of the same year.
In late 1987, the publishers of 80 Micro decided to end all TRS-80 coverage in the magazine. Beginning with the January 1988 issue, the magazine was focused exclusively on Tandy MS-DOS computers. The end of the TRS-80 coverage led directly to the creation of three other publications: TRSTimes, Computer News 80, and TRSLINK.
After the magazine’s transition to MS-DOS, many of the TRS-80 companies stopped buying advertisements. With declining subscribers, diminished advertising, and an incredibly narrow focus, it was no surprise when 80 Micro published its final issue in June 1988. That issue was only 80 pages long.
Filed Under Magazines, 80 Micro, Wayne Green
Comments
Comment by Ivan R Kennedy:
Happy to see the coverage of 80 Micro. I waited for each issue in great anticipation and do retain almost a complete set of the magazine, lacking only #1 and #10.
However, I would like to correct your comment that the final issue was in May, 1988. I also purchased #101, published in June 1988. Like #100, it had 80 pages as you mention but was just a pale shadow of its hey-day in the early 80s’. It’s a shame Charles Tandy hadn’t lived lived longer and the TRS-80 line might have developed independently; Bill Gates would have had more competition.
When I partly retire in a year or two, I intend to spend far more time with 80 Micro, stoking up memories of the days when we actually participated in computer developments, both hardware and software and weren’t more or less restricted just to what Bill Gates and others serve up.
Thanks for your wonderful work on this.
Comment by Matthew Reed:
Thanks for your comment and for the correction. I have made the change to the article. Actually, I have the June 1988 issue of 80 Micro and was a subscriber right up until the end. I don’t know how May 1988 got in there.
Thanks again.
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