[Home]History of TRS-80

HomePage | Recent Changes | Preferences

Revision 11 . . (edit) November 4, 2001 9:17 am by (logged).224.38.xxx [Padded out 'Z80' into 'Zilog Z80 Processor.']
Revision 10 . . (edit) October 14, 2001 1:32 pm by Koyaanis Qatsi
Revision 9 . . (edit) September 28, 2001 7:56 pm by (logged).86.27.xxx
Revision 5 . . (edit) September 27, 2001 11:00 pm by (logged).86.27.xxx
  

Difference (from prior major revision) (minor diff, author diff)

Changed: 2,3c2,3
It looked like a very thick keyboard (like the later [Commodore VIC]? and used a Z80.
It had 4K RAM and a 4K ROM with Microsoft tiny BASIC.
It looked like a very thick keyboard (like the later [Commodore VIC]? and used a Zilog Z80 procesor.
It had 4K RAM and a 4K ROM with Microsoft tiny BASIC.

Changed: 7c7
writing to the screen caused "snow" on the screen because no bus arbitration logic was used to arbitrate between CPU writes to the screen RAM and display logic reads from the same RAM.
Writing to the screen caused "snow" on the screen because no bus arbitration logic was used to arbitrate between CPU writes to the screen RAM and display logic reads from the same RAM.

Changed: 9,10c9,10
Later a model 1 system came available that had an 8K BASIC rom, and 16K of RAM.
To upgrade to a floppy disk based system you had to buy the "expansion interface" that added a "single density" floppy disk interface (which was based on a 1771 chip without a seperate "data seperator" and was thus very unreliable)32K more RAM a serial interface (option) and a centronics printer interface.
Later a model 2 system came available that had an 8K BASIC rom, and 16K of RAM.
To upgrade to a floppy disk based system you had to buy the "expansion interface" that added a "single density" floppy disk interface (which was based on a 1771 single density floppy disk controller chip, but it lacked a separate external "data seperator", and was thus very unreliable)32K more RAM, a serial interface (option) and a centronics printer interface.

Changed: 12c12
many clones of the TRS-80 model 1 came on the market, including the LOBO, the LNW-80 (which was only available in kit form), the "bart smith" system from new zealand and the Dutch ASTER CT-80.
many clones of the TRS-80 model 1 came on the market, including the LOBO, the LNW-80 (which was only available in kit form), the "bart smith" system from new zealand and the Dutch ASTER CT-80.

Changed: 14c14
Tandy later came with the TRS-80 model 16, which was a totaly different UNIX based 16 bit system (it used Microsofts Xenix) , and the Model 3, a more integrated and much improved model 1.
Tandy later came with the TRS-80 model 16, which was a totaly different UNIX based (it used Microsofts Xenix)16 bit system (68000 plus Z80), and the Model 3, a more integrated and much improved model 1.

Changed: 16c16
Tandy also produced the TRS-80 Color Computer (Coco) using a Motorola 6809 processor. This machine was
Tandy also produced the TRS-80 Color Computer (Coco) using a Motorola 6809 processor. This machine was

Changed: 19,21c19,21
The Coco 1 came with 4K of RAM. It used a regular TV for a display, had an expansion slot for program cartidges or a floppy disk controller. Later models (Coco2 and Coco3) increased the RAM to 16K and 128K.
The Coco came with a version of Microsoft Basic in ROM. It had an expansion slot that could
be used to insert program cartridges, or even an external floppy drive. A version of OS-9? - a
The Coco 1 came with 4K of RAM. It used a regular TV for a display, had an expansion slot for program cartidges or a floppy disk controller. Later models (Coco2 and Coco3) increased the RAM to 16K and 128K.
The Coco came with a version of Microsoft Basic in ROM. It had an expansion slot that could
be used to insert program cartridges, or even an external floppy drive. A version of OS-9? - a

Added: 22a23,24

A British clone of the Coco was called the Dragon 32 .

HomePage | Recent Changes | Preferences
Search: