The TRS-80 series of computers were sold via Radio Shack & Tandy dealers in North America and Europe in the early 1980s. Much software was developed for these computers, particularly the relatively successful Color Computer I, II & III models, which were designed for both home office and entertainment (gaming) uses.
A list of software for the TRS-80 computer series appears below. This list includes software that was sold labelled as a Radio Shack or Tandy product.#
Note: This List is by no means complete, especially with regards to the earlier non-color computer models.
Cat. No. | Title | Type | 1st Appearance | Vendor | Format |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
26-2002 | Cassette Editor/Assembler | Programming Language | 1978 | Tandy Corporation | Cassette Tape |
26-2005 | Level II Basic Instruction Course Part I | User Instruction Manual | 1979 | Tandy Corporation | Cassette Tape |
26-2006 | Level II basic Instruction Course Part II | User Instruction Manual | 1979 | Tandy Corporation | Cassette Tape |
26-2009 | Tiny Pascal | Programming Language | 1980 |
Cat. No. | Title | Media | 1st Appearance |
---|---|---|---|
Cat. No. | Title | Media | 1st Appearance |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Jive Molass | Cartridge | Should never judge by |
Cat. No. | Title | Media | 1st Appearance |
---|---|---|---|
26-2222 | Videotex | Program Pak | RSC-6 |
26-2537 | Space Probe: Math | RSC-10 | |
26-2550 | Clowns and Balloons | RSC-8 | |
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 | |
26-2710 | TRS-80 Color PILOT | Disk | |
26-2717 | Super LOGO | ||
26-2721 | Color LOGO | Disk | |
26-2722 | Color LOGO | Program Pak | |
26-3019 | Diagnostic ROM | RSC-4 | |
26-3021 | Screen Print Program | RSC-6 | |
26-3050 | Chess | Program Pak | RSC-4 |
26-3051 | Quasar Commander | Program Pak | RSC-4 |
26-3052 | Pinball | Program Pak | RSC-4 |
26-3053 | Football | Program Pak | RSC-4 |
26-3055 | Checkers | Program Pak | RSC-4 |
26-3056 | Super Bustout | Program Pak | RSC-6 |
26-3057 | Dino Wars | Program Pak | RSC-6 |
26-3058 | Skiing | Program Pak | RSC-6 |
26-3059 | Color Backgammon | Program Pak | RSC-6 |
26-3060 | Space Assault | Program Pak | RSC-6 |
26-3061 | Art Gallery | Program Pak | RSC-6 |
26-3062 | Zaxxon | ||
26-3063 | Project Nebula | Program Pak | RSC-6 |
26-3064 | Cyrus | ||
26-3065 | Polaris | Program Pak | RSC-6 |
26-3066 | Galactic Attack | RSC-8 | |
26-3067 | Wildcatting | RSC-8 | |
26-3070 | Color Robot Battle | RSC-9 | |
26-3071 | Roman Checkers | RSC-8 | |
26-3073 | Poltergeist | RSC-9 | |
26-3075 | Color Cubes | RSC-8 | |
26-3076 | Mega Bug | RSC-8 | |
26-3077 | Micro Painter | RSC-8 | |
26-3079 | Castle Guard | RSC-9 | |
26-3080 | Tennis | RSC-8 | |
26-3081 | Monster Maze | RSC-9 | |
26-3082 | Crosswords | RSC-9 | |
26-3083 | Gin Champion | RSC-9 | |
26-3085 | Microbes | RSC-8 | |
26-3086 | Slay the Nerius | RSC-10 | |
26-3087 | Clowns and Balloons | RSC-9 | |
26-3088 | Shooting Gallery | RSC-8 | |
26-3089 | Canyon Climber | RSC-9 | |
26-3090 | Popcorn | Program Pak | RSC-8 |
26-3091 | Double Back | RSC-9 | |
26-3092 | Reactoids | RSC-10 | |
26-3093 | Dungeons of Daggorath | RSC-10 | |
26-3095 | Color Baseball | Program Pak | |
26-3101 | Personal Finance | Program Pak | RSC-4 |
26-3102 | Investment Analysis | RSC-6 | |
26-3103 | Color File | RSC-6 | |
26-3104 | Spectaculator | RSC-6 | |
26-3105 | Color Scripsit (1981) | Program Pak | RSC-6 |
26-3109 | Color Scripsit II (1986) | Program Pak | |
26-3149 | Atom | Program Pak | |
26-3150 | Bingo Math | Program Pak | RSC-4 |
26-3151 | Music | Program Pak | RSC-4 |
26-3152 | Typing Tutor | RSC-6 | |
26-3153 | Color Computer Learning Lab | Cassette | RSC-6 |
26-3154 | Handyman | RSC-6 | |
26-3156 | Audio Spectrum Analyzer | RSC-8 | |
26-3157 | Graphics Pak | RSC-9 | |
26-3158 | Bridge Tutor | RSC-8 | |
26-3250 | Editor Assembler With ZBug | RSC-6 | |
26-3255 | Color Scripsit | Disk | RSC-8 |
26-3256 | Spectaculator | Disk | RSC-8 |
26-3260 | Personafile | Disk | RSC-8 |
26-3299 | Sands of Egypt | Disk | RSC-9 |
26-3300 | Images 1 | RSC-9 | |
26-3301 | Images 2 | RSC-9 | |
26-3310 | Pyramid | Cassette | RSC-8 |
26-3311 | Raaka-Tu | Cassette | RSC-8 |
26-3312 | Bedlam | Cassette | RSC-8 |
26-3313 | Madness and the Minotaur | RSC-9 | |
26-3320 | Card Games | RSC-9 |
Cat. No. | Title | Media | 1st Appearance |
---|---|---|---|
Many of these titles also ran on the Model I, as the Model III was designed to be backward-compatible with the Model I.
Cat. No. | Title | Media | 1st Appearance |
---|---|---|---|
26-1566 | Visicalc | ||
26-1562 | Profile | ||
26-1565 | Microfiles | ||
26-1705 | Advanced Statistical Analysis | ||
26-1604 | Versafile | ||
26-1563 | Scriptsit | Disk | |
26-1505 | Scriptsit | Cassette | |
26-1564 | Mailgram | ||
26-1552 | General Ledger I | ||
26-1553 | Inventory Control | ||
26-1554 | Accounts Payable | ||
26-1555 | Accounts Receivable | ||
26-1556 | Payroll | Disk | |
26-1557 | Concrete Take-Off | ||
26-1558 | Business Mailing List | ||
26-1559 | Manufacturing Inventory Control | ||
26-1560 | Fixed Asset Accounting | ||
26-1503 | Mailing List | Cassette | |
26-1504 | Level II Payroll | Cassette | |
26-1508 | In-Memory Information | ||
26-1571 | Real Estate I | ||
26-1572 | Real Estate II | ||
26-1573 | Real Estate III | ||
26-1574 | Real Estate IV | ||
26-1577 | Surveying | ||
26-2201 | FORTRAN | ||
26-2202 | Macro Editor/Assembler | ||
26-2203 | COBOL | ||
26-2204 | Compiler BASIC | ||
26-1704 | Double Precision Subroutines | ||
26-1507 | Standard & Poor's STOCKPAK System | ||
26-1603 | Budget Management | ||
26-1509 | Trendex Stock Package | ||
26-1802 | “Quick Watson” Deduction Game | ||
26-1806 | Casino Games Pack | ||
26-1904 | Micro Marquee | Cassette | |
26-1905 | Flying Saucer | Cassette | |
26-1906 | Invasion Force | Cassette | |
26-1907 | Checkers 80 | Cassette | |
26-1908 | “Eliza” Artificial Intelligence | Cassette | |
26-1909 | Pyramid | Cassette | |
26-1910 | Haunted House | Cassette | |
26-1911 | Dancing Demon | Cassette | |
26-1912 | Space Warp | Cassette | |
26-1956 | Zaxxon | ||
26-1605 | Astrology | Cassette |
Cat. No. | Title | Media | 1st Appearance |
---|---|---|---|
Cat. No. | Title | Media | 1st Appearance |
---|---|---|---|
26-1608 | DeskMate | Disk | 1984 |
Cat. No. | Title | Media | 1st Appearance |
---|---|---|---|
Cat. No. | Title | Media | 1st Appearance |
---|---|---|---|
? | Lost World Pinball | cassette | ? |
? | Solit | cassette | 2008 |
? | MCBomb | cassette | 2008 |
? | Boarder | cassette | 2008 |
? | Invader | cassette | 2008 |
? | MCMine | cassette | 2008 |
? | Sentinel | cassette | 2008 |
? | Jeweler | cassette | 2008 |
? | Frog | cassette | 2008 |
? | Mahjong | cassette | 2008 |
? | Dungeon | cassette | 2008 |
? | Tank | cassette | 2007 |
? | Cupid | cassette | 2006 |
? | Flight | cassette | 2008 |
? | Risk | cassette | 2009 |
? | Chess | cassette | 2010 |
? | Sokoban | cassette | 2008 |
? | Life | cassette | 2008 |
? | Lander | cassette | 2009 |
? | Kursk | cassette | 2009 |
? | Alert | cassette | 2007 |
? | MCTrek | cassette | 2006 |
? | Rescue | cassette | 2011 |
? | ABM | cassette | 2009 |
? | Gargoyle | cassette | 2010 |
? | Quest1 | cassette | 2010 |
? | Tankcap | cassette | 2010 |
? | Rainmaze | cassette | 2010 |
? | Raider | cassette | 2010 |
? | Kuiper | cassette | 2010 |
? | Centi | cassette | 2010 |
? | Treasure | cassette | 2011 |
? | Slots | cassette | 2011 |
? | Demon | cassette | 2011 |
? | Newpoker | cassette | 2011 |
? | BGammon | cassette | 2012 |
? | Txtadv | cassette | 2010 |
? | Subhunt | cassette | 2010 |
? | Grapher | cassette | 2011 |
? | RedGreen | cassette | 2011 |
? | Starfind | cassette | 2011 |
? | SSheet | cassette | 2011 |
? | Sudoku | cassette | 2011 |
? | Car | cassette | 2011 |
? | Clue | cassette | 2011 |
? | Otho36 | cassette | 2011 |
? | Paravia | cassette | 2011 |
? | Dogstar | cassette | 2011 |
? | Rover | cassette | 2011 |
? | Monster2 | cassette | 2008 |
? | Vader | cassette | 2006 |
? | Rat | cassette | 2007 |
? | Skyscape | cassette | 2011 |
? | MCTetris | cassette | 2006 |
? | Missile | cassette | 2006 |
? | Haunt | cassette | 2010 |
? | Subsrch | cassette | 2006 |
? | Trebuchet | cassette | 2011 |
? | Mnoply | cassette | 2012 |
? | TrekIII | cassette | 2012 |
? | Bandit | cassette | 2012 |
? | Defcon1 | cassette | 2012 |
? | Maze | cassette | 2012 |
? | BJack | cassette | 2012 |
? | Jet | cassette | 2006 |
? | Berzerk | cassette | 2010 |
? | Poker | cassette | 2010 |
? | Alien | cassette | 2010 |
? | QBert | cassette | 2010 |
? | Enigma | cassette | 2010 |
? | Taipan | cassette | 2010 |
? | Snakebit | cassette | 2010 |
? | Loderun | cassette | 2010 |
? | Scramble | cassette | 2010 |
? | HRace | cassette | 2010 |
? | Galilean | cassette | 2010 |
? | Asimovian | cassette | 2010 |
? | Pitman | cassette | 2010 |
? | CSS | cassette | 2010 |
? | MCJoust | cassette | 2012 |
? | Dracula | cassette | 2012 |
? | Dogfight | cassette | 2012 |
? | Klondike | cassette | 2012 |
? | Coloroid | cassette | 2012 |
? | Monopoly | cassette | 2012 |
? | RRoid | cassette | 2012 |
? | Tycoon | cassette | 2012 |
? | Music | cassette | 2012 |
? | Four | cassette | 2012 |
? | Lumpies | cassette | 2012 |
? | Neptune | cassette | 2012 |
? | Cave3D | cassette | 2012 |
? | Trade | cassette | 2012 |
? | Maxit | cassette | 2012 |
? | Sabotage | cassette | 2012 |
? | AQuest | cassette | 2012 |
? | Blockout | cassette | 2012 |
? | Columns | cassette | 2012 |
? | Gbusters | cassette | 2012 |
? | Boxing | cassette | 2012 |
? | DrWho | cassette | 2012 |
? | Switch | cassette | 2012 |
? | Tugawar | cassette | 2012 |
? | Killer | cassette | 2013 |
? | Tholian | cassette | 2013 |
? | Advent1 | cassette | 2013 |
? | Engineer | cassette | 2013 |
? | Tutstomb | cassette | 2013 |
? | Penguino | cassette | 2013 |
? | Doctor | cassette | 2013 |
? | Andromed | cassette | 2013 |
? | Zymon | cassette | 2013 |
? | Grail | cassette | 2013 |
? | Beetrap | cassette | 2013 |
? | Romp | cassette | 2013 |
? | Batlbots | cassette | 2013 |
? | Crawl | cassette | 2013 |
? | Draughts | cassette | 2013 |
? | Pipes | cassette | 2013 |
? | NFlight | cassette | 2013 |
Cat. No. | Title | Media | 1st Appearance |
---|---|---|---|
The TRS-80 Micro Computer System is a desktop microcomputer launched in 1977 and sold by Tandy Corporation through their Radio Shack stores. The name is an abbreviation of Tandy Radio Shack, Z80 [microprocessor]. It is one of the earliest mass-produced and mass-marketed retail home computers.
The RadioShack TRS-80 Color Computer, later marketed as the Tandy Color Computer and sometimes nicknamed the CoCo, is a line of home computers developed and sold by Tandy Corporation. Despite sharing a name with the earlier TRS-80, the Color Computer is a completely different, incompatible system and a radical departure in design and compatibility with its Motorola 6809E processor rather than the Zilog Z80 earlier models were built around.
Tandy Corporation was an American family-owned leather goods company based in Fort Worth, Texas, United States. Tandy Leather was founded in 1919 as a leather supply store. By the end of the 1950s, under the tutelage of then-CEO Charles Tandy, the company expanded into the hobby market, making leather moccasins and coin purses, making huge sales among Scouts, leading to a fast growth in sales.
VisiCalc is the first spreadsheet computer program for personal computers, originally released for Apple II by VisiCorp in 1979. It is often considered the application that turned the microcomputer from a hobby for computer enthusiasts into a serious business tool, prompting IBM to introduce the IBM PC two years later. VisiCalc is considered to be Apple II's killer app. It sold over 700,000 copies in six years, and as many as 1 million copies over its history.
The Tandy 1000 is the first in a line of IBM PC workalike home computer systems produced by the Tandy Corporation for sale in its Radio Shack and Radio Shack Computer Center chains of stores.
The Tandy 2000 is a personal computer introduced by Radio Shack in September 1983 based on the 8 MHz Intel 80186 microprocessor running MS-DOS. By comparison, the IBM PC XT used the older 4.77 MHz Intel 8088 processor, and the IBM PC/AT would later use the newer 6 MHz Intel 80286. Due to the 16-bit-wide data bus and more efficient instruction decoding of the 80186, the Tandy 2000 ran significantly faster than other PC compatibles, and slightly faster than the PC AT. The Tandy 2000 was the company's first computer built around an Intel x86 series microprocessor; previous models used the Zilog Z80 and Motorola 6809 CPUs.
TRSDOS 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. TRSDOS should not be confused with Tandy DOS, a version of MS-DOS licensed from Microsoft for Tandy's x86 line of personal computers (PCs).
The TRS-80 MC-10 microcomputer is a lesser-known member of the TRS-80 line of home computers, produced by Tandy Corporation in the early 1980s and sold through their RadioShack chain of electronics stores. It was a low-cost alternative to Tandy's own TRS-80 Color Computer to compete with entry-level machines such as the Commodore VIC-20 and Sinclair ZX81.
The TRS-80 Model 100 is a portable computer introduced in 1983. It is one of the first notebook-style computers, featuring a keyboard and liquid crystal display, in a battery-powered package roughly the size and shape of a notepad or large book.
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 Color Computer and several pocket computer designs, as well as the Tandy version of the Xenix operating system. Tandy Corp. also produced a version running under MS-DOS for its line of PC compatible computers. Some of the 8-bit versions are tape-based and have no ability to read or write to disk.
The Alternate Source, also known as The Alternate Source Programmer's Journal, was a magazine of technical programming articles, most of which were at the assembly language level, focused on the TRS-80 Model I and Model III. A few articles related to the TRS-80 Color Computer.
Spectral Associates was an American maker of computer games for the TRS-80 Color Computer. It was founded in 1980 and was defunct as sometime in the late 1980s. Spectral Associates sold their software through Radio Shack and via direct sales. It was a very prolific game company for the TRS-80 Color Computer I and II in its heyday.
The Tandy 10 Business Computer System was a short-lived product developed by Radio Shack in the late 1970s as a business-oriented complement to their TRS-80 Model I desktop computer. Released in 1978, the Tandy 10 was built for Radio Shack by Applied Digital Data Systems (ADDS), and was only sold by Radio Shack's dedicated computer center stores.
The TRS-80 Model II is a computer system launched by Tandy in October 1979, and targeted at the small-business market. It is not an upgrade of the original TRS-80 Model I, but a new system.
The TRS-80 Model 4 is the last Z80-based home computer family by Radio Shack, sold from April 1983 through late 1991.
Home computers were a class of microcomputers that entered the market in 1977 and became common during the 1980s. They were marketed to consumers as affordable and accessible computers that, for the first time, were intended for the use of a single nontechnical user. These computers were a distinct market segment that typically cost much less than business, scientific or engineering-oriented computers of the time such as those running CP/M or the IBM PC, and were generally less powerful in terms of memory and expandability. However, a home computer often had better graphics and sound than contemporary business computers. Their most common uses were playing video games, but they were also regularly used for word processing and programming.
TRS-80 is the name of Tandy Corporation's original 1977 microcomputer system. The TRS-80 brand was also later applied to many different computers sold by Tandy, including several unrelated in design to the Model I.
Extended Color Basic is an update to the Color BASIC interpreter for the Radio Shack/Tandy TRS-80 Color Computer series and is the default Basic interpreter, for the Color Computer 2. The Color Computer Basic implementations are somewhat different for the versions of Basic which come with the other family of TRS-80 machines, namely Basic Levels I, II, and III. Assemblers and Pascal and C compilers are available for the different machines in the series. Modified subsets of Color Basic may be found on many of the Radio Shack PC series of pocket computers of the era.
Disk Extended Color Basic is an update to the Color BASIC interpreter for the Radio Shack/Tandy TRS-80 Color Computer series and is the default BASIC interpreter, and therefore the de facto operating system, for the Color Computer 3. The Color Computer Basic implementations are somewhat different for the versions of Basic which come with the other family of TRS-80 machines, namely Basic Levels I, II, and III. Assemblers and Pascal and C compilers are available for the different machines in the series. Modified subsets of Color Basic may be found on many of the Radio Shack PC series of pocket computers of the era.