The Story of the TI99/4A, The Successful Failure - Tech Retrospective

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  • Опубликовано: 27 янв 2020
  • The TI99/4A was Texas Instruments second attempt at taking over the home computer market. Released in 1981, the TI99/4A has a mixed reputation with retro computer collectors. On one hand it was an innovative computer with the first consumer 16 bit CPU (the TMS9900) that was a starting point for many lifelong computer nerds, on the other hand it was an over priced paperweight with a poor software library and a abysmal revised model. Which camp are you in?
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Комментарии • 257

  • @RCfromtheNYC
    @RCfromtheNYC 4 года назад +24

    The 99/4A was the very first compuetr I ever used in 1983. In retrospect, the black & brushed chrome look is a sexy as a computer could get in the 80's!

    • @jackilynpyzocha662
      @jackilynpyzocha662 3 года назад +3

      I had the equally seductive beige model!

    • @-taz-
      @-taz- 6 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@jackilynpyzocha662 I don't know if you're being sarcastic or delusional.

    • @2ndavenuesw481
      @2ndavenuesw481 21 день назад +2

      The Delorean of early PCs

  • @CharlieJohnson963
    @CharlieJohnson963 4 года назад +14

    I shared one with my friend who had the chrome and black middle, with modem and cassette .
    I started my love of computers with this modle. So many memories.

  • @kmhowells2
    @kmhowells2 Год назад +5

    I just discovered this and the $49 price is exactly why my dad bought this back then lol. My favorite memory on this system was Parsec, Hunt the Wumpus and Jungle Hunt.

    • @KznnyL
      @KznnyL 6 месяцев назад

      Parsec snd Hunt the Wumpus. Good times.

  • @cbmeeks
    @cbmeeks 4 года назад +41

    I'm not sure I agree with some of your comments about the TI-99/4A. The TI has a VERY active community and there is new hardware and software being released for it often. There are literally hundreds and hundreds of games (great, good and bad) for it that are NOT educational. But if educational games are your thing then the TI has them in spades. Sure, Apple and Commodore had MORE games but the TI has a lot as well.

    • @NewsmakersTech
      @NewsmakersTech  4 года назад +6

      The Ti definitely did have a smaller library of software available during it's lifetime than the competition (something criticized heavily at the time) It;s no where near as bad of a library as say, the Coleco Adam or the Timex Sinclair 1000 but still not great. The TI does have an active homebrew community but so does the Commodore 4+4 and nobody would say that system has a great library.

    • @cbmeeks
      @cbmeeks 4 года назад +12

      @@NewsmakersTech of course it had/has a smaller library. I acknowledged that. And considering the Coleco ADAM can execute ColecoVision software, I would say the ADAM has a very good library. Especially in the home brew scene. I think you need to do some more research on the TI. I have a FinalGROM cart with literally hundreds of games on it. A lot of them are crap, yes. But a lot of them are very enjoyable. But I would certainly say it has a great library. These days you can get a great condition TI for not much money. A 32K sidecar RAM expansion (not much money) and a FinalGROM cart (again, not much money) and you are pretty much set in TONS of games (many of them good to great). Through in a cheap speech synthesizer and you're in business. If you want to be more exotic, you can even hook a Pi to it and get serial and disk "server" with even more software. The TI is a very underrated system. It's certainly not the garbage you hint that it is. But you're entitled to your opinion as am I.

    • @deathstrike
      @deathstrike 4 года назад +6

      Like I said in an earlier post, the TI was the most powerful system hands down for the price. Mine was the 100 dollar with a 50 dollar rebate and they honored it!!! So 50 bucks and software for pennies. I think I broke my joysticks playing Moon Mine and Donkey Kong and now I have my TI 99/4A from my youth modded with the NanoPEB from Custodio Malilong that had 32k extra memory, CF card slot for virtual disks and a serial port. It's a great machine and my kids can both learn (got the PLATO courseware for free) and play some great oldies. I HIGHLY recommend this machine if you like computer collecting. The TI, C64, and the Atari 800 are the best retro around.

    • @realcourte
      @realcourte 3 года назад

      Before the internet... How to find this "hundred of games"? In my small town, TI-994A was non existing. N'uff said! :)

    • @cbmeeks
      @cbmeeks 3 года назад

      @@realcourte I lived in a small town too. Biggest store we had was K-Mart. Our local K-Mart (30 minute drive from home) had dozens of TI games at the time. They existed. And like I said in my previous cart, my FinalGROM99 cart has "hundreds" of games on it. All of them weren't written after the Internet became popular.

  • @Archpope
    @Archpope 2 года назад +6

    Hunt the Wumpus was an absolute classic!

  • @please_send_Todd_to_Vegas
    @please_send_Todd_to_Vegas 7 месяцев назад +2

    You are not lying about the plastic model. I loved my chrome and black unit as a kid, but had to replace it after an accident...by that time, they had discontinued both models but were still honoring the warranties. I was scared to death I was going to wind up with that beige POS, but luckily I was handed another chrome and black. I had it all, Man...the expansion box, Extended Basic, boatloads of cartridges and boxes of cassettes and floppy disks. Now I have an emulator of it on my PC just to relive the good old days. :)

  • @tron3entertainment
    @tron3entertainment 4 года назад +8

    Used my TI until 1990, and also amassed 90 cartridges - mostly games. Still have it tucked away.

    • @NewsmakersTech
      @NewsmakersTech  4 года назад +3

      That's a lot of cartridges!

    • @why-even-try-brotendo
      @why-even-try-brotendo 3 года назад

      So underrated as a gaming console, that's basically what it was.

    • @why-even-try-brotendo
      @why-even-try-brotendo 3 года назад

      What was your favorite game? Mine was Parsec because it was a challenge.

    • @tron3entertainment
      @tron3entertainment 3 года назад

      @@why-even-try-brotendo - I did enjoy my Parsec. There was one like Missile Command. I enjoyed that one a lot. Lively spritely action.

  • @RadioCaledon
    @RadioCaledon 3 года назад +12

    Yep still have one in my storage room with the expansion cabinet and a few expansion cards. Plus a crap ton of cartridges. Mother in law worked for TI. One day (hopefully soon ) it will come out of storage for restoration.

    • @leewilkerson8185
      @leewilkerson8185 2 года назад +1

      I can still remember much of the hardware and software high technical side.

  • @bigthicketadventures
    @bigthicketadventures 2 года назад +3

    Scott Adams adventure series alone make this system worth having, even today.

    • @dougbadgley6672
      @dougbadgley6672 Месяц назад

      I wish I had access to those games today.

    • @philipshumway9943
      @philipshumway9943 Месяц назад

      @@dougbadgley6672you might still be able to!! There are emulators online and the community for interactive fiction is pretty niche :) I wish I had a link for you, but I’m sure you could find some stuff online! Try searching up for ‘ti99/4a emulators’ or ‘Scott Adams adventure emulators’

  • @CarsonG1017
    @CarsonG1017 2 года назад +3

    I just bought a beige one of these today for a cool $4. Saw it sitting on a table at a church sale, and thought it'd be neat to play around with. You really weren't kidding about the coffee warmer part!

    • @-taz-
      @-taz- 6 месяцев назад +1

      I had the chrome one, but the CPU actually melted and we had to get a new one seated under waranty.

  • @MrSmriley
    @MrSmriley 3 года назад +6

    I had it and loved it! Its Basic was slow, but ok for a first computer. As a kid I used to write Basic games with pen and paper while we were away on vacation then type them in when we returned home, which was very rewarding. And the cartridge games were awesome, loved Parsec and Alpiner!

    • @-taz-
      @-taz- 6 месяцев назад

      Yes, those were good games, especially with the speech synth.

  • @metalheadmalta
    @metalheadmalta 4 года назад +17

    Apologies for the delay... but giving -10k score for software???? Granted, assembly was locked away,but the cartridges on offer were far from disastrus. You mentioned only Parsec... but there are a ton of other gems in the catalogue worth mentioning. Practically all the Scott Adams asventures, the MBX series, with Bigfoot leading the way, the stupendous TI Invaders (definitely the BEST invaders ever), Blasto, Star Trek , all the games by Atari , Pacman, Donkey Kong, Burgertime...
    The Extended Basic cartridge was a godsend, and so many games were written...
    And also, Europe is totally full of the Beige TI.... that also received an enhance production tooling system and quality control...

    • @realcourte
      @realcourte 3 года назад

      Before the internet... How to find "this" catalogue? In my small town, TI-994A was non existing. N'uff said! :)

    • @collinimmanuel9941
      @collinimmanuel9941 2 года назад

      you prolly dont care at all but does anybody know a way to get back into an Instagram account..?
      I was stupid forgot the account password. I appreciate any tricks you can offer me

    • @andredemetrius6083
      @andredemetrius6083 2 года назад

      @Collin Immanuel instablaster :)

    • @collinimmanuel9941
      @collinimmanuel9941 2 года назад

      @Andre Demetrius I really appreciate your reply. I got to the site on google and I'm in the hacking process atm.
      Takes quite some time so I will get back to you later with my results.

    • @collinimmanuel9941
      @collinimmanuel9941 2 года назад

      @Andre Demetrius WTF IT ACTUALLY WORKED :O I just hacked my ig account after ~ 30 mins by using the site.
      Had to pay 15$ but for sure worth the price :)
      Thanks so much, you saved my ass!

  • @vwestlife
    @vwestlife 4 года назад +6

    Only the final revision of the beige TI-99/4A with a 1983 copyright date on the intro screen prevented the use of third-party cartridges. Most beige 4A's have an older revision of the circuit board with a 1981 copyright date and they *can* run third-party software. This web page shows you how to tell the difference between them: www.mainbyte.com/ti99/computers/ti99qi.html

    • @NewsmakersTech
      @NewsmakersTech  4 года назад

      Thanks for the resource

    • @deathstrike
      @deathstrike 4 года назад

      Exactly, I have both the silver/black and the first run beige model. Mine is I think a revision 2 model that does play all third party software. Also, there were actually a lot of decent games for the TI including the Atari series, the actually really good Donkey Kong (has all screens) and the Imagic games like M.A.S.H, Super Demon Attack and others. Sorry but there was plenty of entertainment to be had, and after the selloff, the most powerful game console for the price.

    • @robertlock5501
      @robertlock5501 Год назад +1

      Good call VW - I had just commented on this but your reply is much more thorough

  • @lurkerrekrul
    @lurkerrekrul 2 года назад +2

    Back in the 80s, I only had an Atari 2600 and knew nothing about computers. To me, they were mysterious, expensive machines that I would never be able to own. I hadn't even seen that many screenshots of games in the video game magazines. Then one December I saw a Toy 'R' Us commercial advertising the TI99/4A for $50, and I realized I might actually be able to get one for Christmas, so I started asking for it. After a visit to a local store where they had some other other machines on display, I started asking for a Commodore 64 instead. At the time, I had no idea that it was MUCH more expensive.
    Anyway, my parents got it for me, although for the first year, I only had a cassette drive, which was agonizingly slow. Not knowing much about computers, I thought that's what they all used. I didn't get a floppy drive until the following year. Looking back, I'm pretty happy that I didn't get the TI. The C64 had much more software available for it, and most peripherals just plugged right in.
    In more recent years, I've acquired two of the beige model TI99/4As. I tested one years ago and it worked fine, although I didn't have any software for it. I forget if I tested the other one or not. My only real experience with TI software has been running games in an emulator. Cartridge games work fine, but it seems that absolutely EVERYTHING on disk, whether commercial software, or homebrew stuff, needs some expansion cartridge plugged in, in order to work. Half the time, I can't get the homebrew software to work at all.

  • @TheAtomicTexan
    @TheAtomicTexan Год назад +1

    Just finding this after digging through storage I found an old cartridge. This was my first computer in 83. I loved it at the time. It's partly what drove my love of computers.
    I feel old now... almost 50 years old now.. where did the time go?

  • @TheRetroShed
    @TheRetroShed 2 года назад +1

    We’ve recently got hold of one here in the UK. I never knew anyone who had one back in the day. However it’s a great addition to our collection and I’m waiting for an SSD multicart for it to explore that immense library for it. :)

  • @jackilynpyzocha662
    @jackilynpyzocha662 10 месяцев назад

    It was a Christmas gift in 1983, I learned BASIC programming, had fun with games, too! 16K color, amazing!

  • @Troy729
    @Troy729 2 года назад +9

    TI99/4A was my first computer and I bought it for $59 at Venture. I loved that computer. I was in college and it put me on track to being a future network admin. It did have some second party game cartridges. I had Donkey Kong for it and it looked great on that computer.

  • @yeahralfi1
    @yeahralfi1 3 года назад +1

    Great video which deserves much more views. Thanks !,

  • @solangecossette1374
    @solangecossette1374 Год назад

    In the small town we lived in, there was an active Ti 99 4A club. Each month you could borrow a game cartridge they had. They also had over 32 cassette tapes of games - one side for Basic, the other for Extended basic. Every now and again the director of the club would obtain new games or softwsre on tape and allow people to borrow those (1 cartridge, 1 tape - exception for tunnels of doom, which required both). The director then had a talk on how they could 'get software' using the modem - likely from a BBS of sorts.
    About 4 other friends of ours also had a Ti 99 4A. It felt that you either had a Ti, or a Vic 20.

  • @PeBoVision
    @PeBoVision 2 года назад +2

    I think I paid $199 locally for my 4A in 1982. When the line was cancelled on the eve of the 99/8, I moved over to the Atari 800XL. It had an enormous library, a slower processor that provided much faster system performance, and an interesting take on sprites. But there was just something about the 4A that I always missed.
    10 years ago I rekindled the flame, and discovered a remarkable enthusiast community and a wealth of new hardware and software that finally demonstrate the system's considerable capabilities, despite its by-design failings.
    After 40 years it has become a very desirable nostalgia system. (The limited in-house library makes acquiring a complete set very possible, with just enough hard-to-find items to make it a fun hobby (Still looking for "Gestion Privée").
    In retrospect TI shot themselves in the foot by rushing a product that was gerry-rigged from available components, and instituting a draconian 3rd party licensing model. They believed they could go it alone, and alone they went. But QI models notwithsatnding, they left us a REALLY cool toy to play with. Among the best collector systems in that regard (as long as you have a big desk).

    • @OldAussieAds
      @OldAussieAds 2 месяца назад

      I too went from a TI99/4A to an Atari 8-bit. I was only a kid back then and didn't understand 8-bit vs 16-bit or MHz or anything like that. I just knew the Atari was like lightning compared to the slow TI BASIC.

    • @PeBoVision
      @PeBoVision 2 месяца назад +1

      @@OldAussieAds I was already an adult when I made the switch. All my friends had Ataris or I likely would have gone C-64 (went ST instead of Amiga for the same reason - along with the much, much lower price of admission).
      The Atari was a MUCH MUCH better game machine in 1982...the 4A gives it a run for it's money in 2024 maybe even edging it out (with 32k memory expansion on the TI)
      But can't argue that console TI-BASIC was (and is) both slow and feature-poor. The fact that it was the machine's very architecture that caused it to be so awful is unforgiveable (and kind of adorable).

  • @manlan8
    @manlan8 4 месяца назад

    Somewhere between 84-86, the elementary school I attended had like one, maybe two TI-99/4A for the whole school, so one would come to each classroom a few days of the year. I don't remember being given much direction on using it. They had a few of those education titles and maybe one game on cartridges, and the teacher would send us one by one to use the computer for a 15-20 minute allotment of time during the day or two it was in our classroom. I'd go over and play with whatever program I wanted till the timer said my time was up.
    Either shortly before, or shortly after we moved away from that school system in 86-87, my dad acquired a TI-99/4A. We had no software for it, no expansion slots, no hard drive, just the 16K of RAM. We used the TV as a monitor. I copied a program or two out of a book, and played around a little bit with TI BASIC on my own. Learned enough to create a program to practice/drill elementary arithmetic and have the computer tell you if you got the randomly generated math problem correct or not. But since we had no way to save stuff, I wasn't motivated to go much further than that. However, it was nice to already have a basic understanding of loops, conditional commands, and random number generators before I had an actual programming class in college.

  • @danielrjones
    @danielrjones 4 года назад +6

    TI had the black/chrome look WAY before everyone else! I actually like the look of the updated model too.

    • @alerey4363
      @alerey4363 3 года назад +1

      Both models beat the VIC20 aesthetically; a true pity TI made bad design decisions (having the FIRST 16-bit processor in the home market slowed down to 8 bits and running thru VDP, no 3rd party software licensing, bad PR & marketing, ,etc); I had the beige model when I was 11 and loved it even if it was slow and limited

    • @Miler97487
      @Miler97487 3 года назад +1

      There was some licensed third party software. Milton Bradley, for example had several games out for the TI-99/4(a) in which TI released them using the standard TI cartridges. Like Zero Zap and Blasto. In 1983 TI had Sega and Imagic release games through TI like Super Demon Attack, Fathom, Wing War, and Buck Rogers and the Planet of Zoom, all using standard TI cartridges. Then a bunch of third party software in 1983 flooded the market that TI had nothing to do with, and they had their own distinct looking cartridges. Usually Atatisoft and Parker Bros. which ported popular arcade favorites to the TI-99/4a like Pac-Man, Donkey Kong, Centipede, Q*Bert, Popeye, etc.

  • @stephenwevans
    @stephenwevans Год назад

    We had the black/chrome model when I was a kid. My dad still has it, in the box, along with a brand new one, mib, unopened. Peripheries included the official cassette player (dad has another one, new in box, as well), the speech synthesizer and the joysticks which really cut into the palm of your hands and the articulation of a spoon in molasses. We had a small collection of games, and even coded some simple games from magazines that we saved to cassette tapes. It may have been an overall failure, but it was my introduction to home computers, writing code (which I eventually never did anything with) and learning to type (with one of the educational games). Would love to drop a raspberry pi into one some day and confuse my friends. Thanks for the video, there was a lot here I'd never heard before!

  • @leoismaking
    @leoismaking 9 месяцев назад

    A used Ti-99a was the first computer we ever had in our house. I'm too little to remember much about it other than playing some game cartridges, and I wouldn't really become interested in programming until much later. Now I wish I could go back to it and see what I could make of it nowadays.

  • @gjms
    @gjms 3 года назад +2

    The state of that TI 99/4A hurts my feelings. I got mine in pristine state.

  • @oldradiosnphonographs
    @oldradiosnphonographs Год назад

    Hi, I am having an issue with a 1983 beige model TI 99/4A. I read somewhere it could be an issue with its VRAM? I’m wondering if it’s worth getting it fixed (I’m not very good at DIY repairs) or should getting a different 99/4A would be more cheaper? I have posted a video on my channel highlighting my problem.

  • @funretrogames7498
    @funretrogames7498 2 месяца назад

    Bonjour, petite question, est ce quelqu un saurait si les cartouches de jeux du ti-99 sont compatibles avec un autre ordinateur ou une autre console que celle ci ?? ou sont t ils exclusivement conçu pour ne fonctionner que sur le ti-99 ?? les consoles atari par exemple ont la possibilité la plupart du temps de permettre d interchanger les jeux atari sur d autres consoles atari.. merci d avance pour celui qui aurait l info :)

  • @packfan1946
    @packfan1946 8 месяцев назад

    The TI 99/4A was my first computer and I loved it. I was in middle school and the book that was included with the computer on learning the Basic Programming Language put me way ahead of my peers cause the Basic language was being taught in all my math classes. By the time I was a freshman in my high school algebra class, my programming skills were advanced compared to my peers and was actually put into accelerated math because of that programming skill. I moved on the Commodore 64 which was fine, but I had to add a cartridge module to increase the basic language level to a more advanced level.

  • @allenbythesea
    @allenbythesea Год назад +1

    Wrote my first program of my life on the ti/99/4a we got from jcpennies. IIRC though it was more like $199 back in the early 80s. I can still remember the 'cush cush cush cush...' of the tape drive. Good times!

  • @jasongross6362
    @jasongross6362 2 года назад +3

    Thank you! I had the black and chrome version and loved it! Of couse the best games were Parsec, Munchman, TI Invaders, Donkey Kong, and Pac-Man! I loved the TI-BASIC and Extended BASIC. Very easy to grasp. I realize now that other computers were faster and better in many ways but still have fond memories!!!

    • @ronb6182
      @ronb6182 Год назад

      Me too. I liked the three voices on the music chip set. I can program the 15 2 part inventions by J. S. Bach and 3 part inventions. Fugues can also be programmed. I cannot play these pieces on a piano keyboard but to program the computer to play them is a challenge in itself. 73

  • @chad017
    @chad017 Год назад +2

    The commentary on *Bill Cosby* is completely mistaken. I don’t know if you were alive in the early 80’s, but *Bill Cosby* was the biggest name in entertainment at that time. He came off his hugely successful *Bill Cosby Himself* film and into the highest rated TV show. Yes his reputation is tarnished now, but that was decades later. There was no better celebrity in the early to mid 80’s to hire as a spokesperson than *Bill Cosby.*

  • @VitruviusXXV
    @VitruviusXXV 3 года назад

    The chrome and black was my first. Had a lot of fun writing programs for it. I graduated to an Amstrad CPC464 colour monitor. Powerful machine for the time and plenty of good games.

  • @MrHurricaneFloyd
    @MrHurricaneFloyd 2 года назад +1

    I grew up dirt poor and my first computer was a Ti994A that I picked up in a thrift store for $10 back in 1990.

  • @dtester
    @dtester 2 года назад

    That explains why I had two friends that both had this along with my school! Probably my first computer experience!

  • @Sl1pstreams
    @Sl1pstreams 2 месяца назад

    There’s a HUGE Jack Tramiel-Commodore link here.
    Tramiel hated TI for almost putting Commodore out of business in the 1970s calculator wars. His revenge at Commodore was to launch a price war against the 99/4A by slashing VIC-20 and C-64 prices to levels far below TI’s costs… but where Commodore could still make money due to its high volume and lower costs.
    In 1983 at a major trade show, Commodore announced a HUGE price cut on peripherals for the 64 including disk drives, monitors, and printers.
    An enraged executive from TI stormed over to the Commodore booth and shouted at Tramiel about how the peripheral cuts would ruin TI’s computer business… as TI was making up for losses it took on every 99/4A (as a result of price cuts from the price war) with profits on peripherals.
    Tramiel smiled and reportedly said “yes, I know,” and the 99/4A was discontinued later that month. He’d had his revenge.

  • @georgegozzard6030
    @georgegozzard6030 10 месяцев назад

    I had one of those...used to play Parsec on it for hours every day. No other game has ever received that much of my time and attention!

  • @PianoMan-hx3ev
    @PianoMan-hx3ev 3 года назад +2

    Learned BASIC thanks to that thing.

    • @fitfogey
      @fitfogey 3 года назад

      Same here. Grew into a nice lucrative profession because of this thing. This video disrespects one of the best computers ever made.

  • @rachelreid8621
    @rachelreid8621 5 месяцев назад

    This was the first computer I learned about in elementary school. BASIC program
    I even remember some of the commands .

  • @Danny-us8dc
    @Danny-us8dc 3 года назад +3

    This was my first home computer in the late 80's. I never realized there were so many games and cartridges. I only had 3. Basic, Extended Basic, and Turtle. If I wanted games, I used a book filled with Extended Basic code for several simple games. Took me forever to manually type out the code in hopes that the game was any good.

    • @etownAndy74
      @etownAndy74 2 года назад

      Well BASIC was built-in, not a cartridge. And I'm assuming "Turtle" is TI Logo or TI Logo 2? There's was no cartridge called "Turtle."

    • @biggur5
      @biggur5 2 года назад

      Same here. I was a kid but I can still remember the codes!
      Call char, call hchar, etc etc

  • @markbanash921
    @markbanash921 4 месяца назад

    Its best feature for me was the keyboard. It reminded me of the TI Silent 700 terminal that I used at a local library.

  • @flirtwd
    @flirtwd 4 года назад +3

    Wow! I remember being in a mall with a Kmart and they had those stockpiled for only $49. Circa, 1983. And hello! Cosby was the main spokesperson for TI speak and spell back in the day. That short pause, er, shade was funny but out of context. No disrespect. You are an awesome presenter! You can see the striation marks on the coffee holder or whatever the tech name is where the cartridges were to be loaded. The games were pretty damn good too. Now I have tears streaming down my face.

    • @NewsmakersTech
      @NewsmakersTech  4 года назад

      Thank you for watching! We have two different models of the TI99 and really need to get some software for them and get them up and running.

    • @78katz
      @78katz 3 года назад

      My father started out programming with these. He bought dozens of them before transitioning to the IBM PC. I remember going into a Kmart with him and filling up a shopping kart with the $50 units. Parsec with the speech synthesizer couldn't be beat in '83-'84. Hunt the Wumpus wasn't too bad either

  • @antonnym214
    @antonnym214 2 года назад

    Very nice! I subscribed immediately.

  • @TehDrewsus
    @TehDrewsus 11 месяцев назад

    The beige models had 2 revisions. The first allowed for third party carts to be used, home screen had a 1981 copyright. The QI, "quality improved" second revision, only played first party carts and has a 1983 copyright on home screen.

  • @FrozenCharlottes
    @FrozenCharlottes Год назад

    I got my "silver" one in probably 1983 (I was 11) and I really resented the fact that I didn't at least get a Commodore which was what I wanted. One thing that you didn't mention on this video was that if no cartridge was inserted, it would boot to a command prompt that allowed you to write code in BASIC. You could not save anything without the expansions (which I didn't have) but it taught me the in's and out's of programming which I ended up pivoting to a 30 year career using Visual Basic starting from the early 90s.

    • @Miler97487
      @Miler97487 10 месяцев назад

      You could save in BASIC without any expansion. You could save on cassette because the TI-99/4A came with a hookup that allowed a cassette recorder to be hooked to your TI-99/4A so you can save and load programs on cassette. To be honest I loathed cassette storage because it was so cranky about the volume you have it set. When loading more often than not you'll receive an "Error detected in data" or "Error: No data found" message.

  • @kevinstrade2752
    @kevinstrade2752 2 года назад

    Have both models, but are more recent purchases. My cousin had one back in the day and had fond memories with it. My aunt bought it on liquidation and it was impressive for about a year or 2. He had the voice module wich was awesome back in the early 80's. Its A shame because the TI-99 could have offered more back in the day had TI not bungled it. I do have the power tower for mine and it modernizes the whole set up. I could not imagine daisy chaining disk drives,voice modules, memory expansion etc. There are some decent games for it though nothing that would have drawn anyone from thier existing platforms or beloved computers. I do fire mine up from time to time and play some of the games and newer homebrews for it. Thanks for the memories and taking us back.

  • @DanDrolett
    @DanDrolett 10 месяцев назад

    My mom called to wake me up after I worked an overnight shift in the fall of '83. She told me she saw these things advertised on sale for 99 bucks at Toy 'R' Us. Couldn't pass on that deal. The TI99/4A was my first PC. Didn't know anything about programming language so I loaded up on cassette software and did my best to learn the ropes. Took about five minutes to load a program from cassette and if it didn't read the data bursts just right you had to rewind the tape and start the read over again. Still for a $99 machine it was amazing what it could do for the day, and with the TV RF output there was no need to spring for a separate monitor.

  • @jackeldogo3952
    @jackeldogo3952 2 года назад +1

    Funny, I was going to mention PARSEC. I used to play that on my older sister's computer whenever I'd go visit her apartment when I was in HS. I think it's the only thing I ever played on that machine. I remembered she had some Pac-Man knockoff that didn't impress me.

    • @dmcd7333
      @dmcd7333 Год назад +1

      yes , KC Munchkin...great game!

  • @robertlock5501
    @robertlock5501 Год назад

    Good video by and large. One thing of note is that the Beige systems came in **two** varieties, and only that latter revision was "locked out"

  • @lordevyl8317
    @lordevyl8317 2 года назад +1

    I think the computer gets more flack than it deserves. While it might not have been the best computer as far as being a gaming computer when compared to computers like the C64, and the Atari 8-bit line (hell, even the VIC-20), the fact that it was technically the very first mass marketed 16-bit computer (at least as far as processing is concerned) kind of makes the computer way ahead of its time in that department.

  • @Slightly_Sadistic
    @Slightly_Sadistic Год назад +1

    T'was my first gaming system. I played Parsec to death among several of the games. Alpiner is also quite nice.

  • @jorgesampaio5635
    @jorgesampaio5635 3 года назад

    My first computer too, 1983 ( the gray plastic one). I had the Extended Basic, the Editor Assembler, and even the Wycove Forth (useless). I've learned how to program the TI9900 assembler, which I did some code to draw points, straight lines, and arcs. The 5 1/4 disk driver was a sh...!! I used it until 1987 when I got an Apple IIe for my master program, which I replaced some 6 months later for a PC, with a cheap 8088 processor, 30MB HDD, and a math co-processor.

  • @quincy1048
    @quincy1048 4 года назад +1

    I had the TI/99a I bought for $100. I didn't realize at the time TI was dumping it. So I never got to get any peripherals. I have since picked up a NIB model that is like a trip back in time. But before that I picked up a untested model and guess what it didn't work. I sent that one off to be swapped with a working model for $40 which turned out to be about $70 by the time I was done and the swap was not so much a swap but a repair that took about 9 months. it took so long I bought the other one figuring it was NEVER going to get done. I had no idea the revised plastic version only ran TI software. Glad I didn't get one of those. My interest back in the day and still today is in software development and while the architecture of this machine is choked the TMS9900 is a nice chip at the asm level with the 16 registers and stuff. I also picked up a mini-peb for mine which is a nice modern expansion. I wanted to pick up the modern video upgrade but it seems to be in a long redesign phase. Hey I even forgot the name of it. FA18 I think it was...might be wrong on that.

    • @NewsmakersTech
      @NewsmakersTech  4 года назад

      The Ti99/4A is such an interesting system for software development, definetly a challenge but quite the fun one.

  • @freddyvretrozone2849
    @freddyvretrozone2849 4 года назад +1

    Hi,
    It was my first computer as well.
    Why not talking about the FinalGROM, show the machine working... ?

  • @dennisc6716
    @dennisc6716 3 месяца назад

    That was my first computer at home in 1981. After I learned its BASIC I sat up all weekend and wrote an authentic looking Pac-Man game for it.

  • @mattbaker5757
    @mattbaker5757 4 года назад +1

    I really prefer the look of the brushed metal cased TI's over the beige plastic, however, on almost every TI I've come across, the metal has been bent, dented, scratched and corroded. I'd love to find one in primo condition. I also own Atari XL computers which also use brushed metal, more sparingly as trim and function buttons, but they are also difficult to keep the brushed metal looking good, but at least with them there are solutions like faux brushed metal decals/tape that can cover the original metal and look great. No such luck with TI-99/4A's with all the realestate that has to be covered.

  • @markradaba
    @markradaba 3 месяца назад

    I had the silver version... Loved it growing up!

  • @craigdallen
    @craigdallen 2 года назад

    My first computer was the Silver 99/4A. I had limited games, but I learned BASIC on it.

  • @tombrickhouse-growthmatrix6201

    I had the chrome & black one with expansion box, voice synthesizer, modem. I learned to write software in Basic language on that computer, which led to a second career in web development after 25 years as a bricklayer. I can't remember the next computer I got but I remember that one. I thought it was cool.

  • @dyscotopia
    @dyscotopia 3 года назад +1

    Parsec was great. I remember playing something called Henhouse I really enjoyed, which being not made by TI would have not been playable on the revision.
    Still, I have fond memories of ruining my eyesight attempting to learn BASIC.

  • @georgeh6856
    @georgeh6856 3 года назад

    When I was in high school, my friend had one of the silver and black TI 99/4As. He used to call me on the phone and "talk" to me by typing stuff into the TI and having it output the speech through the speech synthesizer. I had no idea what it was saying.

  • @silitekmodder5681
    @silitekmodder5681 Год назад +1

    I got my TI-994a for under $49 even today!

  • @ThePictic
    @ThePictic 3 года назад

    I went to school thag had one. This takes me back

  • @indeliblyinked
    @indeliblyinked 3 года назад +1

    Oh the memories of Parsec and Hunt the Wumpus.

  • @jamesslick4790
    @jamesslick4790 Год назад

    I bought the revised model (with the software limitation) and swapped in an older mobo. Boom, Better keyboard, But no limitation. LOL. This was in the late 80's and these were at every yard sale for almost nothing! I had Extended BASIC, a P.E. Box, 2 FDDs and 2 cassette decks and Speech Synth! so, for "almost nothing" I had a fully decked out TI-994a system in 1988! The only "O.G." thing I did NOT have was the TI monitor. (It was a "holy Grail" for me in those pre eBay days.) 👍😊👍

  • @blushduluth6739
    @blushduluth6739 3 года назад

    The discovery of this channel has improved my overall quality of life.

  • @JonathanAshworth-mm4jp
    @JonathanAshworth-mm4jp 3 месяца назад

    Had one in 1984.£49.99.2 games TI invaders and parsec.Then got alpiner.My dad's mate had one with tape games. Plus you spent an hour typing in a program out of a mag.Then waited 10mins for it to load. Happy days hahaha 🤘👻

  • @paherbst524
    @paherbst524 3 года назад +3

    My first computer

  • @MrPatrichon
    @MrPatrichon 3 года назад +1

    The black & silver model is such a beauty, even by today's standards. That's the one we had. The cartridge games were awesome and lightning fast. And the games which we programmed in TI-Basic and which we picked in magazines, while generally very sluggish because it was run on two layers of interpreters (that's what I read somewhere), were very imaginative and make for extremely fond memories. The joysticks had great ergonomics. I don't think the TI was a great productivity machine, but it was an insanely good gaming rig.

    • @jamesslick4790
      @jamesslick4790 Год назад

      It was "double interpreted". Also The TI-994/a BASIC was written by Microsoft!

  • @OldAussieAds
    @OldAussieAds 2 месяца назад

    My family didn't have much in the mid 80s. E.g. We still had a black and white TV when most of my friends had colour. So when my grandfather passed to us his beige TI-99/4A (years after it was discontinued) I was excited. We got no software for it. All I ever played were BASIC games typed in from the manual, or games my father translated from books from the library. Was it the ideal setup? Absolutely not. Would I have changed anything in retrospect? No way. It gave me an appreciation for programming and tinkering and it gave my father and I a lifelong bond through technology.

  • @s0ld4u
    @s0ld4u 2 года назад

    Nice historical overview.
    Peripheral "Peri-feral"

  • @SpikeDiegel
    @SpikeDiegel 2 года назад

    I had an uncle who worked for TI that got me the Biege, cost reduced version. It ended up burning out one day when I was a kid and had to throw it away

  • @mattcorley4622
    @mattcorley4622 Год назад +1

    This thing basically taught me math and to read.

  • @gregoryknight2928
    @gregoryknight2928 Год назад +2

    I'm not so sure I agree with everything in this review. The TI 99/4A was my first computer and we bought it at JC Penney's for $299. That substantial investment in 198 terms for my single mother helped paved the way for my interest in computers and programming. Tunnels of Doom and Parsec were awesome games beyond compare to any other games of the day. Played them for hours.
    With that computer I learned TI Basic and TI Extended basic and programmed games for my brother and I and other friends with TI's -- a horse racing game, Wall Street simulation game, etc...
    The VIC 20 was too limited (in my teenage opinion at the time and playing on my best friend's VIC 20) as was the Commodore VIC 64 (my friend upgraded to that as soon as it was available).
    Just as in video gaming you were either an Atari 2600 fan or Intellivision, in intro home computer market as a teen you were either a TI 99/4A fan or Commodore. The TRS 80 was a school only model because it was just too expensive for most kids in my neighborhood to have their parents buy.
    This was a great stroll down memory lane for an old fart like me, but it hardly captures the crux of the importance of the TI 99/4a. Nor does it capture the advantages of the TI 99/4A over the Commodore VIC 20 or Commodore VIC 64 and the interplay between those systems.
    For what it's worth, most of my Atari 2600 friends were also TI 99/4A geeks. My Intellivision video gaming friends were typically the Commodore VIC 20/64 geeks.

  • @BazookaIke
    @BazookaIke 3 месяца назад

    Hunt the Wumpus or a Space Invaders type of game that i recall playing a lot. Can't remember if it was called Space Invaders, but it had the aliens going back and forth across the screen, firing at you and inching their way to the ground. Clear the board and you get bonus points for shooting a space ship that crosses the screen.

  • @eebuckeye
    @eebuckeye Месяц назад

    Where did you guys go?? Hope to see new videos!

  • @DiabloVentureGames
    @DiabloVentureGames 3 года назад +5

    This was my first computer, my wife bought it for me for Christmas of 1982; i believe she paid $199.00 and it came with a mail in discount coupon. I loved it, eventually adding most of the upgrades, expansion box and so fourth. As far as the software I did purchase a real good DOS style spread sheet and word processing in late 1983 and taught myself on the little TI machine. I kept this computer until i upgrade to a Macintosh 512ke in 1986 and computers have been in my home ever since, including starting to build my own windows based machines from good old Fry's electronics. But i will always have fond memories of my first little TI 99/4a.
    Postscript... at 62 I'm finding myself distancing from tech all together seeing how dystopian our nation is heading. With High Tech censoring our speech for political views and AI and algorithms monitoring you, I have no social media whats so ever. If i do go on line which is mostly for occasional news and RUclips videos I now use a good VPN and a TOR browser. Ditched my so called smart phone, use google voice and burner flip phones, went back to a stand alone un-traceable old garmin GPS and dusted off my vintage copies of 1984 and Brave new world to see just how close we are heading to whats in those books. Whats next? Look to history for the White Rose Movement...Lol

  • @compactflash
    @compactflash 3 года назад +3

    I have one of these. It's a good computer.

  • @richardmoser1272
    @richardmoser1272 3 месяца назад

    I had the black and chrome model. Paid $99. Had two tape recorders for writing and recording my own software, in TI Basic, which was a little different from regular Basic (not completely compatible).

  • @adamsal5877
    @adamsal5877 2 года назад +1

    i remember got ti99 at 1987 the main problem face me is that many companies like olivetti and ibm had complete system with disk drive and bigger memory...the ti99 its like lego you need buy and buy to get complete system and bigger twice than personal pc ..so i through in garbage

  • @Tuxon86
    @Tuxon86 4 года назад +2

    There are three version of the 99/4a. The silver, the beige non QI, and the crippled beige QI.

  • @Trishlicious
    @Trishlicious 2 года назад +1

    The Timex Sinclair 1000 was my first, Ti was my second; dad got some cash and said lets buy a computer, wish I knew more when I was 13, I would have purchased the C64 instead. Parsec!!!!!!

  • @vcv6560
    @vcv6560 9 месяцев назад

    At the time it wasn't understood why a 16 bit computer would be so slow; to learn later it was a delay in the production of their 8 bit CPU forced the design change (and the 256 byte memory area) that it all made sense. Imagine the frustration of the engineers already knowing their 'superior' system would be a technical failure.

  • @jeffhyche9839
    @jeffhyche9839 2 года назад

    I must be the only one in the world with out any great love or fondness for this computer. It was the computer that I learned to program on because if you wanted a game for it, you had to sit down and write it. This wasn't actually that bad because through our Ti-99 users club we would trade programs we wrote with other uses had wrote. One of the thing we did was go to a arcade and take notes and draw screens from the arcade. Then go home and port them to the Ti. Some of the ports of arcade games ranged from garbage to amazing, depending on the skill of the programmer. Eventually, we got tired of our friends, who had Ataris, Apples, and C-64 having better setups than we did. You could buy a C-64, a disk drive, and have access to a whole world of third party programs. For the price of the expansion box, no cards, for the Ti I could have a C-64 and a disk drive. Once I did the Ti went into the closet and never saw the light of day again.

  • @martinbarr-david8173
    @martinbarr-david8173 2 года назад +1

    My 1st computer was the TiI994a beige.

  • @ximenoworks
    @ximenoworks 3 года назад

    I got mine from Children's Palace when I worked there just before the dump in price. At that time there was a magazine with program code to run programs and save it on cassette tape. I dont considered it a real computer till I got a IBM PS2 model 50.

  • @TehDrewsus
    @TehDrewsus 11 месяцев назад

    9:12 "bedroom programmers"
    Um, context?! Haha. I know this video is old, but my first computer was a ti 99/4a. I currently have an unopened beige model in my garage.

  • @User0000000000000004
    @User0000000000000004 Год назад +2

    "periphreal sales"
    Yeah, I'm sure that's how that wodr is prononucde.

  • @BrianClarkpharmd
    @BrianClarkpharmd 3 года назад

    I had one lol. I had the tape drive for it as well

  • @inachu
    @inachu Год назад

    I still have it in my closet. I am tempted to build it out with the best hardware new or old.

  • @DJTI99
    @DJTI99 Год назад

    I had the silver one. It was my first computer, hence my DJ moniker...

  • @bjbell52
    @bjbell52 3 года назад +1

    I started with an Atari 400, then 800, then 130xe. I tried a C64 but the colors were so washed out on my TV set that I could barely see what I was writing. I had a chance to get a TI99/4A for a very small price and didn't. Watching some of the TI99 videos, I wish I would have.

    • @NewsmakersTech
      @NewsmakersTech  3 года назад

      The TI994A was a really cool system but with some pretty major drawbacks compared to the C64 and Atari 8 bit line

  • @nadinelach3931
    @nadinelach3931 19 дней назад

    Sent 😊sooo many hours playing games on my TI-99. I wish I kept it!!!

  • @entropygenerator2646
    @entropygenerator2646 4 года назад +1

    Die hard Parsec fan reporting.

  • @theoneleggedraven1940
    @theoneleggedraven1940 Год назад +1

    2023 i picked up a replica of my old ti-99 4a from a game repair store locally for $35 with the cords and 3 "games" lol. It's one of the few pieces of trash i feel good paying for.

  • @captaincrash12
    @captaincrash12 3 года назад +1

    Buck Rogers cart for the win.

  • @metalfoxssmallenginerepair3181
    @metalfoxssmallenginerepair3181 3 года назад

    How can I load Roms online from an sd card. Bet they make it. Considering I can use a floppy emu for my Macintosh 112k

  • @j_m_b_1914
    @j_m_b_1914 3 года назад

    Man I miss loading programs from a tape drive and waiting 2 minutes to load 8k of data.

  • @2010mistersoftee
    @2010mistersoftee 2 года назад

    I ran a TI 99 four a with its acoustic modem and ran a bulletin board service…..1980…

  • @ig_foobar
    @ig_foobar 3 года назад

    This machine was great for parts after it became obsolete. I reused the power supply, the TV modulator, and other components in other projects.

    • @thisisrob8750
      @thisisrob8750 2 года назад

      not really great for parts as most were proprietary in this system