Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Boeing Model 80A-1 in Museum of Flight in Seattle. The Boeing 80 is an American airliner of the 1920s. A three-engined biplane, the Model 80 was built by the Boeing Airplane Company for Boeing's own airline, Boeing Air Transport, successfully carrying both airmail and passengers on scheduled services.
The PS/2 Model 80 was the highest-end PS/2 in the original 1987 line-up and was IBM's first PC based on the 386 processor. The Model 80 received several updates over the course of its lifespan, increasing the computer's hard drive capacity as well as the clock speed of its processor and the maximum supported RAM. IBM discontinued the Model 80 ...
An assortment of IBM PS/2s in various form factors; from left to right: a Server 95, a Model 80, a Model 25, and a PS/2 E on top of a Model 56 and a Model 30 286. The Personal System/2 or PS/2 was a line of personal computers developed by International Business Machines Corporation (IBM).
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 ...
IBM 80 Electric Punched Card Sorting Machine, model 1, Introduced by IBM in 1925, 450 cards per minute. [3] This sorter was almost twice the speed of the older Hollerith 70 vertical sorter and used an entirely new magnetically operated horizontal design.
TRS-80 Model 4 (standard version) TRS-80 Model 4P. The successor to the Model III was the Model 4. Its microprocessor was a faster Z80A 4 MHz CPU. [7] Disk-based Model 4's had 64 KB of RAM standard; an optional bank of additional 64 KB was accessible to applications software using bank switching technology.
The TRS-80 computer manufactured by Tandy / Radio Shack contains an 8-bit character set. [1] It is partially derived from ASCII , and shares the code points from 32 - 95 on the standard model. Code points 96 - 127 are supported on models that have been fitted with a lower-case upgrade.
TRS-80 Pocket Computer PC-1 with Realistic Minisette 9 Tandy PC-4 Pocket Computer Tandy PC-6 with 8 KB memory expansion card installed and a compatible cassette interface Tandy PC-8 Pocket Computer. The Tandy Pocket Computer or TRS-80 Pocket Computer is a line of pocket computers sold by Tandy Corporation under the Tandy or Radio Shack TRS-80 ...