For some reason I got the "itch" to buy a computer that, well, I've wanted for a long time and I finally tracked one down and bought it.
It's a Tandy 1000 EX, the first computer I ever used (circa 1986 or so.)
A whopping 7 mhz processor, 256K RAM, no hard drive, no on board-sound beyond the single internal speaker, 16-color display, 5.25" floppy drive.
I've yet to find a contemporary monitor to use with it but it does have a Composite out on it so I'm able to hook it up to a modern-day TV and get.... "okay" video. (Though I am on the hunt for a contemporary monitor.)
I've got a joystick bought and coming within the next week and I've even bought some software that, amazingly, still works! (Seriously we're talking 30-year-old 5.25" floppies here not exactly made of sturdy stuff.)
It fun to just turn the machine on, here the loud beep from it than the buzzing/grind of the floppy drive testing. You see some BIOS info appear on the screen and then.... "Insert diskette and press any key."
Yep. That's it. Doesn't do a damn thing else. LOL
I'm not likely to do anything with this thing once the novelty wears off, some of the games I bought that will run on it I've either got versions of that run on DOS Box or, well, they're 30-year-old games.
Still. a nice little machine and I'm impressed with how neat and clean it looks. It really looks like it just came new out of the box! The one I have is only missing the volume knob on the underside of it. The volume is still good on it and needn't be adjusted and the adjust could still, theoretically, be accessed by sticking something in the hole where the knob would be. But I think I'll leave it be.
So, fun to have. Now to find a Tandy CM-11 monitor. (Which the ones I've found look to be more expensive than this computer cost. I paid $50 for the computer plus $30 shipping, the monitors I'm finding are running north of $100 before shipping.)
It's a Tandy 1000 EX, the first computer I ever used (circa 1986 or so.)
A whopping 7 mhz processor, 256K RAM, no hard drive, no on board-sound beyond the single internal speaker, 16-color display, 5.25" floppy drive.
I've yet to find a contemporary monitor to use with it but it does have a Composite out on it so I'm able to hook it up to a modern-day TV and get.... "okay" video. (Though I am on the hunt for a contemporary monitor.)
I've got a joystick bought and coming within the next week and I've even bought some software that, amazingly, still works! (Seriously we're talking 30-year-old 5.25" floppies here not exactly made of sturdy stuff.)
It fun to just turn the machine on, here the loud beep from it than the buzzing/grind of the floppy drive testing. You see some BIOS info appear on the screen and then.... "Insert diskette and press any key."
Yep. That's it. Doesn't do a damn thing else. LOL
I'm not likely to do anything with this thing once the novelty wears off, some of the games I bought that will run on it I've either got versions of that run on DOS Box or, well, they're 30-year-old games.
Still. a nice little machine and I'm impressed with how neat and clean it looks. It really looks like it just came new out of the box! The one I have is only missing the volume knob on the underside of it. The volume is still good on it and needn't be adjusted and the adjust could still, theoretically, be accessed by sticking something in the hole where the knob would be. But I think I'll leave it be.
So, fun to have. Now to find a Tandy CM-11 monitor. (Which the ones I've found look to be more expensive than this computer cost. I paid $50 for the computer plus $30 shipping, the monitors I'm finding are running north of $100 before shipping.)