Computer User was a short-lived TRS-80 magazine created by the publishers of Interface Age, a popular computer magazine that began in 1976.
Unlike many other TRS-80 magazines, Computer User was a professional, glossy publication from its first issue in November 1983. It was heavily promoted, with promotional copies of the premiere issue sent to subscribers of competing magazines.
(Read more...)
The Percom Doubler was the first successful double-density add-on for the TRS-80 Model I. It was introduced in 1980 by Percom Data Company for an initial price of $219.95. The Doubler hardware was designed by Wayne Smith and Harold Mauch (president of Percom) and the accompanying software was written by Jim Stutsman.
(Read more...)
VTOS (which stood for “
Virtual
Technology’s
Operating
System”) was the second TRS-80 Model I operating system created by Randy Cook, the author of Model I TRSDOS. VTOS was released in 1979 and sold through Randy Cook’s company, Virtual Technology Inc. The original price was $49.95 for VTOS version 3.0. That was increased to $99.95 for version 4.0, or $125.00 for VTOS plus Operator’s Guide and Master Reference manual. There doesn’t appear to have been a Model III version of VTOS.
(Read more...)
The Patch was a unique all-hardware approach to implementing lower case on a TRS-80 Model I. It was sold by CECDAT Inc. for a price starting at $69.97.
The normal approach to adding lower case involved a hardware modification plus a software driver. Radio Shack never added a lower case driver to the Model I ROM, so the separate driver was required to enable generation of lower case characters. The lower case driver was stored in RAM, so it needed to be loaded again from cassette or disk every time the Model I was used.
The Patch combined an ordinary lower case hardware modification with a “patch” to the Model I ROM that added a lower case driver. Probably the best description of how it worked comes from one of their advertisements:
(Read more...)
I was saddened to learn that Irvin Mike Schmidt passed away on February 16, 2009. Usually credited as I. Schmidt or Mike Schmidt, he was the founder and driving force behind 80-U.S. Journal, the TRS-80 magazine that he published from 1978 to 1984. He was the editor-in-chief for most of its run and his influence was very evident in the magazine.
You can read an obituary for him here.
80-U.S. Journal was the best remembered name for a TRS-80 magazine that was published by 80-Northwest Publishing from 1978 to 1984. It was also published under the names 80-Northwest Journal and Basic Computing. Until 1982, it was published bimonthly (six issues a year) but it increased to monthly (twelve issues a year) after that.
80-Northwest Journal (sometimes called 80-NW Journal) was first published in 1978 with the September/October issue. The founder of the magazine, Irvin “Mike” Schmidt, described the reason behind the new publication in the first issue:
(Read more...)
The TRX-280 was a proposed motherboard replacement for the TRS-80 Model 4, described in the December 1990 issue of Computer News 80 and issue 38 of TRSLINK. It was created by Peter Ray of Anitek Software Products in an attempt to design a “next generation” TRS-80.
The TRX-280 design was based around the Z280, an enhanced Z80 compatible processor created by Zilog. The Z280 was an interesting chip, providing software compatibility with the Z80 yet adding many new features, such as a memory management unit, new addressing modes, and new instructions. It was also faster than the Z80 at the same clock speed.
The TRX-280 was planned as a drop-in replacement for the Model 4 motherboard (and possibly the Model III as well). It would have remained compatible with all TRS-80 software and hardware, with the one exception that it would have lacked a cassette port.
The TRX-280 had an impressive set of proposed features:
(Read more...)
The LNW System Expansion was a popular alternative to the Radio Shack Expansion Interface. Introduced in 1979 by LNW Research, the System Expansion was the most popular of the Expansion Interface replacements. LNW Research later described themselves as “the number one manufacturer of system expansion units and accessories for the Model I computer”.
The LNW System Expansion sold for $69.95 as a kit with a bare printed circuit board and manual. LNW later introduced the $399.95 LNW System Expansion II, which provided the same features but came assembled in a metal case.
(Read more...)
The Color-Graf was a color graphics interface for the TRS-80 Model I and Model III. Sold by Solectronics, the Color-Graf originally cost $260.00 for the Model I version. That price was later reduced to $195.00 for the Model I version and $235.00 for the new Model III version. Solectronics advertised the Color-Graf from 1982 to 1983.
(Read more...)
80 Microcomputing, later 80 Micro, was the most popular of the TRS-80 magazines. It was ranked the seventh fastest growing magazine in 1982 and was the third thickest magazine that year. (Those figures were for all magazines, not just computer magazines.)
80 Microcomputing began publishing in 1980, and its circulation rose steadily until it topped 124,000 readers in 1983. Circulation began a slow decline after that although subscriptions picked up slightly in 1985.
(Read more...)