If you say the word out loud you can clearly hear the 'ur' sound at the end of the word. Most American spellings are just short hands so they don't have to type or write more
@@ZoomPicard This is true, but one thing which gets my goat is most of us Brits have been goaded into replacing "z" with "s" .. so are we now supposed to say we "an-al-ice" things ..? Or use small rodents to shrink a program window etc.. ;) -ize etc. is perfectly correct in British English. I blame spell checkers from the 1980s onward for this nonsense. Whereas logically one would pronounce "color" similar to "collar".
I bought one of these in 1989 and played Flight Simulator on my lap during my 1 hour bus commute to work. This was the computer I first used Quicken on back in the days when it ran on a single floppy disk. QW.EXE was in A: and my data files were on the B: floppy. This was a major step up from my Tandy 600 since it actually ran DOS.
Those old laptops are often much more interesting to me than regular desktops since most times the laptop is more of a time capsule to when it was released.
Tech NOW Ya, oddly enough I was already familiar with him _before_ I saw his vids. He is also on the vcfed forums (vintage computer federation). Then I saw his videos completely by accident, and went, "Hey, it's vwestlife!" Anyone who is a member at vcfed is, of course, going to be interested in his videos... since they refer to what the rest of the world calls "old junk", that we call "interesting, truly engaging electronics history".
if you like this video, you should really watch a bunch more of his. lots of neat old tech, and kind of a different perspective than the rest of youtube.
11:25 LIST file selection ❤ - I remember sooo well, using it all the time back in the days. Sooo powerful and quick! Just loved it. Thank you so much for bringing back that memory!
At my high school back in 1992, my school loaned me out a Tandy 1400 to type my English creative writing work as my teacher had trouble reading my handwriting, remember the machine was as heavy as heck
Worked at Radio Shack in the mid 80's. Sold these (well, a few, far less then I wanted to, they were expensive !!!!) as well as played with them in the store. Loved em, all of the Radio Shack Laptop / handheld computer line. 35 years later and I have never owned a desktop, only laptops (since 1994 till the present).
Great video on this machine. The Tandy 1400LT is one of my favorite “floppy only” laptops, along with the Zenith Z-181. The only thing I know of that they made for the expansion slot was the controller for the 20MB hard drive kit, which is fairly rare.
I like the design, which in some ways seems to have been inspired or based upon a portable electronic typewriter of some kind. I'd take a guess that they got away with a small power adapter due to extensive use of CMOS parts and perhaps even having the BIOS save and restore the state of any particularly power hungry parts between uses. The display is far better than that of IBM's early PC convertible.
This was an awesome laptop at the time. I had this laptop in high school for three years. This thing was a tank it held up real well. I had the optional modem. I remember using wordperfect 5.1 on this laptop. This video brings me down memory lane.
Always a joy to see and hear about these old laptops. Your videos about retro tech are always very interesting and a joke thrown in or two as well make each video well worth watching. I am looking to get a Samsung Google Chrome book laptop very soon.
I just picked up a boxed one of these (video incoming) and it’s a beautiful machines. Well built and a fantastic keyboard. Some neat little features too.
NiCad batteries can last for years when stored and looked after properly, I have a Sony BetaMovie camcorder that has it's original NiCad battery which still works fine, just have to remember to discharge them fully before recharging them to eliminate the memory effect... :)
I did? I thought I received a minor spelling correction, it's amazing how so many people obsess over such tiny little things as though they were huge... :P
The left-hand bay in the back was for an optional hard drive that cost as much as the computer itself. The 128K upper memory (or even another drive) was supposed dot be for the communication program. At 128K it was amazing what you could fit there in those days. A lot of very useful programs were smaller than 128K, believe it or not. I eventually added a full-size keyboard, used the RGB port for a color monitor, added a mouse, and an external hard drive that went through the printer port and was a whopping 20MB !!
I hope the RTC battery won't leak over the board, even if it works. A very nice machine. I only have one dos laptop, an ESCOM Paradigma II DX4. But it's plastic has become so brittle that the hinges are loose in the case. (And the motherboard is corroded because of a leaking RTC/CMOS battery.) But after a cleanup it still works, only takes a lot of time at the charger (~1min) before it can boot, I suspect the caps first need to charge up. (And they might be in bad shape -- early SMD caps)
I have the one with the hard drive, it's also got an expansion card for a modem, I can't get it to turn on. I took it apart and couldn't find anything wrong with it, idk. I'm just glad to see one working 😊
I used to work at Radio Shack in San Francisco back in the 80s. All of us had to take seminars in order to know how to use the computers and be able to sell them and help the customers deciding what was better for their needs.
Reminds me of the Compaq portables of the same era which had a very similar style and were quite popular with executives that needed to work or keep in touch with the office while on the road.
I'll bet Sharp made this, or at least had a hand in making it. That display is just like the one in the Sharp PC-7100 and PC-7200, and Sharp liked to put the ability to have more than 640k of RAM and an always-accessible BIOS setup on their computers.
Great video on the 1400LT. Right now I'm getting my brother's old LT1400 going. It all seems to work but I'll be darned it I can figure out why it insists on formatting disks at 360K. I try formatting at 720K but it says something about being beyond the parameters. At least it boots up and runs Hitch Hiker's Guide to the Galaxy!
still own one of these beauties in fully functional state. you can still find some compatible battery packs on the market to fire it up. best pc for old basic games, my 9 yo sun loves it.
Wow. That comparison between the 1988 Tandy and the 1993 Compaq is insane. A perfect demonstration of technological advances between the late 1980's and the early 90's.
To be fair, there were already much smaller and lighter laptops by 1988 -- for example, the NEC UltraLite. They just weren't as expandable or nice to type on as the 1400LT.
Radioshack sold a 1A 15v adapter with the universal tips way back some years ago. back in 2010 I needed one so I could power my Libretto 50CT, when I had it.
And here and there you will find the cliche comment: "They don't build machines like these anymore"... Well, at that price tag, they'd better be sturdy machines, made to last 3-4 times longer than present day ones... And well, if they did last more than modern machines, that was completely in vain, except for collectors, because PC hardware back then went obsolete faster than it does now!
I've found it's brother - Tandy 1400FD in a dumpster a while back. Sadly I still haven't been able to fix it. The thing just doesn't power on properly (I did get it to display the RAM or something once or twice) when you apply the power. I am thinking that the internal power supply is bad (I already recapped it and it didn't help). I really need to take another look at it when I have some time.
Will do. Though I was also thinking of just replacing the entire PSU board with a custom PSU built from a few cheap modules from ebay. I am not entirely sure that it is the PSU though. I always get the EL backlight, and the LEDs on the floppies (that don't go out). It also refused to boot those few times when it actually powered on and displayed the RAM. It would just spin the floppy, but not actually do anything with it.
If the battery lasts about 1/2 hour with the back-light 'on', I wonder how long your machine will run on battery with the back-light 'off'.... definitely awesome that it holds a charge at all after all the years.
Front-facing dual floppies, a nice keyboard and a battery that's held up over nearly 30 years? Aside from the wonky composite colour I don't think there's anything you could dislike about this!
Pretty much every IBM PC compatible machine ever made is Y2k compliant. Some of them would jump back to 1900 or some other date instead of flipping over from December 31st, 1999 to January 1st, 2000, but even on those once you manually set the date to the correct value they work just fine.
Actually in those times that was a laptop and if you have one with hard drive and more sleek profile it was called a notebook. And even in the stores and megazines was a differentiation.
Similar in a lot of ways, yet different in a lot of other ways to the IBM PC Convertible. I have 3 Convertibles, they were solid machines. One is still used. I also have the optional thermal printer for them. I'd bet Tandy didn't have any such device.
1:34 imagine having a keyboard like that as a teen, when you were trying to play video games at night before a school day. My mom would have been furious. I had one of those 90's cheap keyboards that had a big racket when you pressed the keys. Had to buy one of those Logitech silent ones so mom did not wake up at night and kick my ass. This was in 2005 or so.
3:22 I just noticed the door is setup in a way to where you'd have to unplug the power to open the door. Let's hope you have a charge on that nicad battery otherwise you'd have to save your work and shut down.
Can you invert the video on the internal screen such that text shows up as light text on a dark background? I know that was a common feature on laptops with black and white screens, I think some such laptops had a button or a keyboard command or perhaps even a software utility to perform this function.
It is actually already inverse video. The normal DOS prompt text is supposed to be white on black, but the LCD displaying it as "black" (dark blue) on "white" (light blue). And if a program wants to display black text on a white background, it shows up the other way around, as "white" on "black". But unlike some other old laptops, there is no way to flip this around via a hotkey.
I see. Well, I knew it was inverse I just didn't write my question very well. I understand it was very commonplace for black and white laptops to display inverse video, I'm not sure if that was by default or not, but I'm thinking perhaps it was with some at least.
Git that clock save battery out of there yo! I just took my 1400 LT apart and the battery had already started leaking. It hadn’t destroyed anything, but it was on the verge of disaster! Also, what’s the polarity on the ac/dc adapter?
I want a dual floppy/no HDD laptop. They run on practically nothing. My HDD miniscribe mitsubishi laptop weighs a ton, and has to be plugged into an AC outlet at all times. It looks to be about a little smaller than that one, but not by much. That is one thing I have noticed though over the decades...NiCad batteries tend to last the longest of all the different battery types. I reckon this one uses 18670 cells. They are hideously expensive now. Around 7-10$ a piece... The only way to go is to buy some remote control car battery packs and scrap them from those.
Actually it's pronounced "neck" -- or at least it was back in the '80s when they introduced a computer called the NEC Trek, meant to be pronounced "neck trek".
he gets corrected about stuff pretty often, especially this, but if you watch more of his videos you will learn that he almost never makes mistakes of this nature. if he's unsure, he researches the issue and will use whatever he feels is appropriate. i respect him for this. we don't always agree on everything, but when we disagree i know he's got good reason.
I love seeing The CGA Compatibility Tester in the wild! But did you know the version you used is very old? You should grab the newest one which has more test patterns and bugfixes.
The caps lock key on that keyboard is genius! Why have a dedicated button for it right next to the 3rd most used key? Just make it a secondary function like this 30 year old laptop! Maybe it'll even help out with the clickbait craze happening on RUclips right now... :P
Thanks for the reply. Follow up dumb question. Where can I find the disk image file? It would be nice to create one like you did in the video. Nice video by the way. Just pickup up one of these. Just need to find a power supply for it.
Tandy system disk images: www.oldskool.org/guides/tvdog/system.html Use DOSGWB.DSK within the Tandy 1100FD system disks archive. It also works fine on the 1400LT.
moon bugs great game seems this only run on cga only i had troubles run on vga monitor video nessing up how ever does works fine in dos box using cga mode
So this is a laptop with a mechanical keyboard, ultrawide display and RGB
This thing is basically a Predator 21X
dp vn03 Except 10x more portable
But can it run solitare?
@Minecraft Tristan Dove the object thingy whoosh
I saw this comment first and was wondering how this has RGB anything... then I get to the ports and it has an "RGB" port. You clever bastard.
And it actually PREDATES the Predator 21X by 30 years.
Nice to see Tandy sporting a 21:9 aspect ratio. Clearly going for the fully immersive, -16 colour- monochrome, cinematic experience :)
If you say the word out loud you can clearly hear the 'ur' sound at the end of the word. Most American spellings are just short hands so they don't have to type or write more
with immersive, life like Dobly 1.0!
You are saying color wrong if you say it ur, it's or. Cu-lore
@@ZoomPicard This is true, but one thing which gets my goat is most of us Brits have been goaded into replacing "z" with "s" .. so are we now supposed to say we "an-al-ice" things ..? Or use small rodents to shrink a program window etc.. ;)
-ize etc. is perfectly correct in British English. I blame spell checkers from the 1980s onward for this nonsense. Whereas logically one would pronounce "color" similar to "collar".
I'd like to think that "Standy mode" is a pun on Tandy and not a typo
I love your passion for old tech, even the seemingly unimportant. Your presentation is always top notch. Thank you for a great channel!
I bought one of these in 1989 and played Flight Simulator on my lap during my 1 hour bus commute to work. This was the computer I first used Quicken on back in the days when it ran on a single floppy disk. QW.EXE was in A: and my data files were on the B: floppy. This was a major step up from my Tandy 600 since it actually ran DOS.
Those old laptops are often much more interesting to me than regular desktops since most times the laptop is more of a time capsule to when it was released.
Its more durable compared with new laptop..build quality with premium grade material.
Old computer boot-up and operation should be considered ASMR.
ESPECIALY WITH OLD BATTERY 30 YR OLD 1!
Relaxes the hell out of me, that's for sure.
I randomly found this and it was surprisingly entertaining. Cool
The history of how 90% of the subscribers found his vids ^^
Tech NOW Ya, oddly enough I was already familiar with him _before_ I saw his vids. He is also on the vcfed forums (vintage computer federation). Then I saw his videos completely by accident, and went, "Hey, it's vwestlife!" Anyone who is a member at vcfed is, of course, going to be interested in his videos... since they refer to what the rest of the world calls "old junk", that we call "interesting, truly engaging electronics history".
if you like this video, you should really watch a bunch more of his. lots of neat old tech, and kind of a different perspective than the rest of youtube.
11:25 LIST file selection ❤ - I remember sooo well, using it all the time back in the days. Sooo powerful and quick! Just loved it. Thank you so much for bringing back that memory!
Computers were so brutal back in the day. Kids have no clue how good they have it!
I’m always keeping a look out for this era of computers there’s just something interesting about them
At my high school back in 1992, my school loaned me out a Tandy 1400 to type my English creative writing work as my teacher had trouble reading my handwriting, remember the machine was as heavy as heck
Wow, 4 hours isn't even that bad by today's standards, really impressive for 1988!
Worked at Radio Shack in the mid 80's. Sold these (well, a few, far less then I wanted to, they were expensive !!!!) as well as played with them in the store. Loved em, all of the Radio Shack Laptop / handheld computer line. 35 years later and I have never owned a desktop, only laptops (since 1994 till the present).
Great video on this machine. The Tandy 1400LT is one of my favorite “floppy only” laptops, along with the Zenith Z-181. The only thing I know of that they made for the expansion slot was the controller for the 20MB hard drive kit, which is fairly rare.
I really like the sound of that keyboard. Anyone know what switches it's using?
Mitsumi miniature mechanical: deskthority.net/wiki/Mitsumi_miniature_mechanical
I like the design, which in some ways seems to have been inspired or based upon a portable electronic typewriter of some kind. I'd take a guess that they got away with a small power adapter due to extensive use of CMOS parts and perhaps even having the BIOS save and restore the state of any particularly power hungry parts between uses.
The display is far better than that of IBM's early PC convertible.
This was an awesome laptop at the time. I had this laptop in high school for three years. This thing was a tank it held up real well. I had the optional modem. I remember using wordperfect 5.1 on this laptop. This video brings me down memory lane.
Always a joy to see and hear about these old laptops. Your videos about retro tech are always very interesting and a joke thrown in or two as well make each video well worth watching. I am looking to get a Samsung Google Chrome book laptop very soon.
One of the best reviews I've ever seen! Great job!
I just picked up a boxed one of these (video incoming) and it’s a beautiful machines. Well built and a fantastic keyboard. Some neat little features too.
Love that keyboard sound!
NiCad batteries can last for years when stored and looked after properly, I have a Sony BetaMovie camcorder that has it's original NiCad battery which still works fine, just have to remember to discharge them fully before recharging them to eliminate the memory effect... :)
*its
I did? I thought I received a minor spelling correction, it's amazing how so many people obsess over such tiny little things as though they were huge... :P
Let me guess... You found the Sony camcorder in a silver DeLorean damaged by lightning? That thing isn't really 30 years old.
Given that the camcorder used in BTTF was a VHS-C JVC thing, and not a Sony BetaMovie, er, no, I found it on ebay, and bought it... :P
The left-hand bay in the back was for an optional hard drive that cost as much as the computer itself.
The 128K upper memory (or even another drive) was supposed dot be for the communication program. At 128K it was amazing what you could fit there in those days. A lot of very useful programs were smaller than 128K, believe it or not.
I eventually added a full-size keyboard, used the RGB port for a color monitor, added a mouse, and an external hard drive that went through the printer port and was a whopping 20MB !!
I hope the RTC battery won't leak over the board, even if it works.
A very nice machine.
I only have one dos laptop, an ESCOM Paradigma II DX4. But it's plastic has become so brittle that the hinges are loose in the case.
(And the motherboard is corroded because of a leaking RTC/CMOS battery.) But after a cleanup it still works, only takes a lot of time at the charger (~1min) before it can boot, I suspect the caps first need to charge up. (And they might be in bad shape -- early SMD caps)
Great video -- I love 80s laptops and luggables!
I have the one with the hard drive, it's also got an expansion card for a modem, I can't get it to turn on.
I took it apart and couldn't find anything wrong with it, idk.
I'm just glad to see one working 😊
I love these old 'laptops' lovely looking machines....
I used to work at Radio Shack in San Francisco back in the 80s. All of us had to take seminars in order to know how to use the computers and be able to sell them and help the customers deciding what was better for their needs.
Reminds me of the Compaq portables of the same era which had a very similar style and were quite popular with executives that needed to work or keep in touch with the office while on the road.
Ah the memories. My employer at the time had some of these as well as Compaqs (the lunchboxes).
I'll bet Sharp made this, or at least had a hand in making it. That display is just like the one in the Sharp PC-7100 and PC-7200, and Sharp liked to put the ability to have more than 640k of RAM and an always-accessible BIOS setup on their computers.
Great video on the 1400LT. Right now I'm getting my brother's old LT1400 going. It all seems to work but I'll be darned it I can figure out why it insists on formatting disks at 360K. I try formatting at 720K but it says something about being beyond the parameters. At least it boots up and runs Hitch Hiker's Guide to the Galaxy!
still own one of these beauties in fully functional state. you can still find some compatible battery packs on the market to fire it up. best pc for old basic games, my 9 yo sun loves it.
Wow. That comparison between the 1988 Tandy and the 1993 Compaq is insane. A perfect demonstration of technological advances between the late 1980's and the early 90's.
To be fair, there were already much smaller and lighter laptops by 1988 -- for example, the NEC UltraLite. They just weren't as expandable or nice to type on as the 1400LT.
This definitely puts my Compaq Armada 1700 to shame in terms of bulkyness.
Nice find on this one! Look at the size of that hinge mechanism 0.0; this thing could definitely take a beating.
My first laptop, I was 10 years old.
Another great video.
Radioshack sold a 1A 15v adapter with the universal tips way back some years ago. back in 2010 I needed one so I could power my Libretto 50CT, when I had it.
It reminds me very much of my Amstrad PPC laptiop that I used to use in 1988.
I had one back in the day!
I was 21 when this came out and it seems like yesterday to Me . :) QC
Nice glad it still works
This was my first laptop. Used to have to use 10 floppy disks to run WordPerfect. Also used to play Chuck Yeager flight simulator on it.
I had one of these when I was a kid, played Infocom games on it all night long :p
Around $3400-3500 in today’s money
And here and there you will find the cliche comment: "They don't build machines like these anymore"... Well, at that price tag, they'd better be sturdy machines, made to last 3-4 times longer than present day ones... And well, if they did last more than modern machines, that was completely in vain, except for collectors, because PC hardware back then went obsolete faster than it does now!
These old computers made in the USA and Japan are of high quality and durable.
Today, they don't make equipment like they used to.
I've found it's brother - Tandy 1400FD in a dumpster a while back. Sadly I still haven't been able to fix it. The thing just doesn't power on properly (I did get it to display the RAM or something once or twice) when you apply the power. I am thinking that the internal power supply is bad (I already recapped it and it didn't help). I really need to take another look at it when I have some time.
roli I had the same issue with mine, check the fuses and the transistors on the psu board.
Will do. Though I was also thinking of just replacing the entire PSU board with a custom PSU built from a few cheap modules from ebay. I am not entirely sure that it is the PSU though. I always get the EL backlight, and the LEDs on the floppies (that don't go out). It also refused to boot those few times when it actually powered on and displayed the RAM. It would just spin the floppy, but not actually do anything with it.
768K of RAM!.. that's pretty awesome... overall, definitely a nice vintage laptop. Thanks for sharing. :-)
If the battery lasts about 1/2 hour with the back-light 'on', I wonder how long your machine will run on battery with the back-light 'off'.... definitely awesome that it holds a charge at all after all the years.
Front-facing dual floppies, a nice keyboard and a battery that's held up over nearly 30 years? Aside from the wonky composite colour I don't think there's anything you could dislike about this!
12:52 Year 2000 compatible... for such an old device!
Pretty much every IBM PC compatible machine ever made is Y2k compliant. Some of them would jump back to 1900 or some other date instead of flipping over from December 31st, 1999 to January 1st, 2000, but even on those once you manually set the date to the correct value they work just fine.
I guess if this qualifies as a "laptop", Apple had no problem calling all 14lbs of the Macintosh Portable......... "portable".
Actually in those times that was a laptop and if you have one with hard drive and more sleek profile it was called a notebook. And even in the stores and megazines was a differentiation.
I understand from the box(online) that Desk Mate is separate, which version?
Always watch your videos 👍
Are you sure it's really electroluminescent backlight, not CCFL (which also can cause a whine because they also use inverters)?
and the L-CTRL key is in the right place! yay!
No wonder the first Psion Series 3 in 1991 was a runaway success!
Similar in a lot of ways, yet different in a lot of other ways to the IBM PC Convertible. I have 3 Convertibles, they were solid machines. One is still used. I also have the optional thermal printer for them. I'd bet Tandy didn't have any such device.
Great video. Thanks. Some day I might get one but will probably go for the HD and its massive storage :)
*its
VWestlife thanks for the edit. The iPad autocorrect is to blame.
1:34 imagine having a keyboard like that as a teen, when you were trying to play video games at night before a school day. My mom would have been furious. I had one of those 90's cheap keyboards that had a big racket when you pressed the keys. Had to buy one of those Logitech silent ones so mom did not wake up at night and kick my ass. This was in 2005 or so.
Great video, I have a Compaq v50 CRT
ruclips.net/video/bvT_bBJBrkI/видео.html
This unit reminds me of the Zenith "Supersport 286" I used to have.
On that 1180 khz AM stereo WHAM, I heard a station in Spanish called Radio Rebelde.
That's from Cuba: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Radio_Rebelde They're on 670, 710, and 1180 kHz AM and also several shortwave frequencies.
They use 20 transmitters on 1180 that I hear a echo on 1180.
I owned that computer. Mine had a 10M or 20M hard disk and one floppy.
So hard driveless laptops were still a thing until the early 1990s?
Actually; I have a 1400 with the 20MB option
I had one, I think they had like a 20meg hdd that slid in that back slot. It was made by GRID.
3:22 I just noticed the door is setup in a way to where you'd have to unplug the power to open the door. Let's hope you have a charge on that nicad battery otherwise you'd have to save your work and shut down.
Can you invert the video on the internal screen such that text shows up as light text on a dark background? I know that was a common feature on laptops with black and white screens, I think some such laptops had a button or a keyboard command or perhaps even a software utility to perform this function.
It is actually already inverse video. The normal DOS prompt text is supposed to be white on black, but the LCD displaying it as "black" (dark blue) on "white" (light blue). And if a program wants to display black text on a white background, it shows up the other way around, as "white" on "black". But unlike some other old laptops, there is no way to flip this around via a hotkey.
I see. Well, I knew it was inverse I just didn't write my question very well. I understand it was very commonplace for black and white laptops to display inverse video, I'm not sure if that was by default or not, but I'm thinking perhaps it was with some at least.
That Burgertime also has the lettuce the wrong color! Yes, that red jumble on the "second to top" layer of each is supposed to be green lettuce!
Was it the FD and HD models that ran on 12 volts instead of 15? I remember some of those older Tandy laptops ran off of 12 volts.
The battery pack is 12 volts. The AC adapter is 15 volts because the charging voltage is always higher than the operating voltage.
Good old stuff.
Git that clock save battery out of there yo! I just took my 1400 LT apart and the battery had already started leaking. It hadn’t destroyed anything, but it was on the verge of disaster! Also, what’s the polarity on the ac/dc adapter?
The power supply is 15 volts DC, negative tip.
I wonder what the aspect ratio of that screen is, 2.35:1 perhaps?
Big laps. Love it :)
Nice laptop
Was this technically a successor to the trs 80 model 100? That’s one laptop that just won’t die. Many of them still work.
No, the Tandy 102 was the successor to the TRS-80 Model 100. The Tandy 102 was sold until 1992 or so.
I want a dual floppy/no HDD laptop. They run on practically nothing. My HDD miniscribe mitsubishi laptop weighs a ton, and has to be plugged into an AC outlet at all times. It looks to be about a little smaller than that one, but not by much. That is one thing I have noticed though over the decades...NiCad batteries tend to last the longest of all the different battery types. I reckon this one uses 18670 cells. They are hideously expensive now. Around 7-10$ a piece... The only way to go is to buy some remote control car battery packs and scrap them from those.
Can it be upgraded with a nuclear powered battery?
That's N-E-C not nec V-20 😉 And man! That was an old processor even for 88' Wikipedia says that that was introduced 6 years earlier in 82'
Actually it's pronounced "neck" -- or at least it was back in the '80s when they introduced a computer called the NEC Trek, meant to be pronounced "neck trek".
he gets corrected about stuff pretty often, especially this, but if you watch more of his videos you will learn that he almost never makes mistakes of this nature. if he's unsure, he researches the issue and will use whatever he feels is appropriate. i respect him for this. we don't always agree on everything, but when we disagree i know he's got good reason.
I love seeing The CGA Compatibility Tester in the wild! But did you know the version you used is very old? You should grab the newest one which has more test patterns and bugfixes.
Thanks, but I'm limited by what can fit on the disk with room to spare for other programs, and the old version still serves its purpose fine for me.
Challenge accepted! If I reduced the size of the current version to smaller than that of the version you're using, would you use the new version?
I took a Basic curse on that Tandy back in 1988
Where can you get the Desk Mate GUI from?
Jabba The Hutt wants his laptop back.
Aye i didnt know ur a who fan also big fan of ur content pls make more
i don't think Thomas (chyrosran22) would like the 1400LT's keyboard switches
The caps lock key on that keyboard is genius! Why have a dedicated button for it right next to the 3rd most used key? Just make it a secondary function like this 30 year old laptop! Maybe it'll even help out with the clickbait craze happening on RUclips right now... :P
Nice machine
I have the HD with the 20MB option and the manuals :)
I have one of them at home in like-new condition working well. looking for a good offer
What type of external CRT monitor can you use?
CGA or EGA, or connect the composite output to a TV.
It's not flickering on the recording.. at least I don't see it
Edit: Nevermind, I see it during the game at the end
Hi! How did you make the MS-DOS 3.3 boot disk?
By downloading the disk image and then writing it using a standard 3.5" floppy drive in a modern(-ish) PC.
Thanks for the reply. Follow up dumb question. Where can I find the disk image file? It would be nice to create one like you did in the video. Nice video by the way. Just pickup up one of these. Just need to find a power supply for it.
Tandy system disk images: www.oldskool.org/guides/tvdog/system.html Use DOSGWB.DSK within the Tandy 1100FD system disks archive. It also works fine on the 1400LT.
Here is the original DOS 3.2 disk image:
winworldpc.com/download/713ee0ae-fe38-11e9-828b-fa163e9022f0
are you Vwestlife or 'VolksWagen" Estlife?
Both.
moon bugs great game seems this only run on cga only i had troubles run on vga monitor video nessing up how ever does works fine in dos box using cga mode
What kind of switches does the keyboard have?
Mitsumi miniature mechanical: deskthority.net/wiki/Mitsumi_miniature_mechanical
Copied from a reply VWestlife made in the comments.
Damn I wrote my first computer program (in pascal) on this one !!! i has been stolen on a train I was so sad ...
This was only a laptop for someone's lap if that someone was Andre the Giant.
VWestlife you know the Gateway small LCD TV has a analog tuner
Yes, it does.
@@vwestlife do you like Spats Bears videos on RUclips
Most of them, yes.
I'm not sure why they called this form factor a 'laptop', it's way too long for that to be practical. Luggable and 'portable', yes. Laptop, no.