Trevor Flowers’ Miniature TRS-80 Microcomputer Houses an Adafruit QT Py for a Working Display
Maker and vintage computing enthusiast Trevor Flowers has put together an ultra-compact clone of the Tandy-Radio Shack TRS-80 microcomputer —
Read moreMaker and vintage computing enthusiast Trevor Flowers has put together an ultra-compact clone of the Tandy-Radio Shack TRS-80 microcomputer —
Read moreSemi-pseudonymous maker “Tomomakes,” hereafter simply “Tomo,” has turned a scrap Tandy-Radio Shack TRS-80 Model II eight-bit microcomputer, built in the
Read moreWe don’t know if you’ve looked into it recently, but the prices for vintage computers are through the roof right
Read moreThe TRS-80 Model 100 was a strange beast. When it debuted in 1983, it resembled nothing that was available at
Read moreEven if you didn’t own a TRS-80, the widespread footprint of Radio Shack in malls meant that if you are
Read moreThe NABU PC caused a bit of a buzz in the retrocomputing community a while back. After all, it doesn’t
Read moreA few weeks ago, I wrote about Adrian from Adrian’s Digital Basement exploration of a bizarre TRS-80 “repack” he was
Read moreAdrian from Adrian’s Digital Basement was given what superficially appeared to be a TRS-80 Model 4. But it also had
Read more[Adrian] had a TRS-80 model IV that looks like it was stored in a mulch pile. However, it seemed to
Read moreTo call [Glen Kleinschmidt] a vintage computing enthusiast would be an understatement. Who else would add the ability to control
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