Well, the chips were manufactured for IBM's PC and PC Jr products originaly (with Tandy the first real clone). But they were always Intel brand names (even if IBM practically drew them up).
Well, the chips were manufactured for IBM's PC and PC Jr products originaly (with Tandy the first real clone). But they were always Intel brand names (even if IBM practically drew them up).
No, the coco computer was equipped with a Motorola 6809 processor.Quote:
I think my old TRS-80 Color Computer used a 2Mhz 80C86 or something like that
If you try to get DOS running on it, remember to use an old 720/800 Kb floppy. They're the ones with only one square indexing hole.Quote:
Originally Posted by Todd a
ZFL - 184 - 02or97 SupersPort
http://www.zdsparts.com/zwl-184.htm
this is the web page that has the stuff about it on it
Not a pentium, this was before pentiums existed. Windows 3.1 would be a snail on that thing, Windows 95 is out of the question. DOS is prolly the answer.Quote:
Originally Posted by david21136
Yup you are right:
http://www.old-computers.com/museum/computer.asp?c=91
I have worked on several of Radio Shacks old one. My oldest brother had the TRS-80 Model 1, my school had the Model 3 and 4, and onther bother had the CoCo model 1. I eventually picked up the CoCo model 3 when Radio Shack started dumping them for $50. Those were the days man... casset tape drive just rocks! :D
i have the same laptop and it looks like it has a 613mb hd in this thing and it had a system that was natave to that laptop where it had lotus, word perfect, norton intagrator, professional writer and some funky net program a graphics program and one like excel