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Scripsit (usually rendered in official marketing and support documents as SCRIPSIT) is a word processing application written for the Radio Shack TRS-80 line of computers. . Versions were available for most if not all computers sold under the TRS-80 name, including the TRS-80 Color Computer and several pocket computer designs, as well as the Tandy version of the Xenix operating sy
TRSDOS (which stands for the Tandy Radio Shack Disk Operating System) is the operating system for the Tandy TRS-80 line of eight-bit Zilog Z80 microcomputers that were sold through Radio Shack from 1977 through 1991. Tandy's manuals recommended that it be pronounced triss-doss.
When that contractor failed to deliver, [2] he adapted Li-Chen Wang's public domain version of Tiny BASIC for the original prototype of the TRS-80 Model I. This required only 2 KB of memory for the interpreter , leaving an average of another 2 KB free for user programs in common 4 KB memory layouts of early machines.
26-2551 The Hound of Baskervilles RSC-8 26-2552 Moby Dick RSC-8 26-2553 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea RSC-8 26-2567 Klendathu RSC-10 26-2568 Vocabulary Tutor 1 RSC-8 26-2569 Vocabulary Tutor 2 RSC-8 26-2624 Pioneers in Technology 26-2625 Inventions that Changed Our Lives 26-2626 TRS-80 Chemistry Lab, Vol. I 26-2709 TRS-80 Color PILOT: Cassette ...
Color BASIC is the implementation of Microsoft BASIC that is included in the ROM of the Tandy/Radio Shack TRS-80 Color Computers manufactured between 1980 and 1991. BASIC (Beginner's All-purpose Symbolic Instruction Code) is a high level language with simple syntax that makes it easy to write simple programs.
The Z80 was the processor for home computers like the Tandy TRS-80 of 1977, the Sinclair ZX Spectrum of 1982 and many others. 1976: US MOS Technology introduces the KIM-1 microcomputer system as a demonstrator for its 6502 CPU. 1976: US Cray-1 supercomputer was invented by Seymour Cray. He left Control Data in 1972 to form his own company.
Trek-80 is a game in which the player must destroy all the Klingon ships within a time limit and cannot lose more than five supply tugs.The player uses the warp drive to move the ship for galactic travel, and impulse drive for moving through the inner quadrant.
During the early development period, the home computer era began in earnest with the TRS-80, PET, and Apple II—what Byte magazine dubbed the "1977 Trinity". [14] Nolan Bushnell sold Atari to Warner Communications for US$28 million in 1976 to fund the launch of the VCS. [15] In 1978, Warner hired Ray Kassar to become the CEO of Atari.