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The Snark was conceived and marketed by Snark Products, Inc. of Fort Lee, New Jersey and was marketed with numerous slight variations, most prominently as the Sea Snark, Super Snark and Super Sea Snark. Other Snark models include the Sunchaser (4-person, made in lateen and sloop-rigged versions), and the Sea Skimmer (board-style 2-person sloop ...
The internals of the TRS-80 Model 100. The left half is the back. Processor: 8-bit Oki 80C85, CMOS, 2.4576 MHz; Memory: 32 KB ROM; 8, 16, 24, or 32 KB static RAM.Machines with less than 32 KB can be expanded in 8 KB increments of plug-in static RAM modules.
The TRS-80 series of computers were sold via Radio Shack & Tandy dealers in North America and Europe in the early 1980s. Much software was developed for these computers, particularly the relatively successful Color Computer I, II & III models, which were designed for both home office and entertainment (gaming) uses.
The Snark, a yacht described in Jack London ' s book The Cruise of the Snark (1911) Snark sailboat, a small, inexpensive, and lightweight sailboat; MV The Second Snark, historically a shipyard tender, now in service as a cruise boat and ferry; USS Snark (SP-1291), a United States Navy patrol boat in commission from 1917 to 1919
Tandy/Radio Shack TRS-80 Model I. In the mid-1970s, Tandy Corporation's Radio Shack division was a successful American chain of more than 3,000 electronics stores. Among the Tandy employees who purchased a MITS Altair kit computer was buyer Don French, who began designing his own computer and showed it to the vice president of manufacturing John V. Roach, Tandy's former electronic data ...
The Shorrock/Centric supercharger is the type with sliding vanes, which by an efficient arrangement are able to travel very close to the walls of the compressor without making contact, thereby allowing greater maximum velocity and reducing lubrication requirements compared to earlier types that contacted the walls.
The Northrop SM-62 Snark is an early-model intercontinental range ground-launched cruise missile that could carry a W39 thermonuclear warhead. Though the Snark was in training by the United States Air Force 's Strategic Air Command from 1958 through 1961, it was only deployed as an operational missile for less than a year during 1961.
This 1920s TRF radio manufactured by Signal is constructed on a breadboard Tuning a TRF receiver, like this 5 tube Neutrodyne set from 1924 with two stages of RF amplification, was a complicated process.