Model T: Difference between revisions

From Bitchin100 DocGarden
Jump to navigationJump to search
(Define the term)
 
Line 34: Line 34:
=== History of the phrase ===
=== History of the phrase ===


Since the 1980s, aficionados of the TRS-80 Model 100 typically used the number “100” to name themselves (e.g., "M100SIG", "Portable 100", "Club 100", "Web100", and of course, "Bitchin 100"). The other computers got lumped in under the same term by default.     
Since the 1980s, aficionados of the TRS-80 Model 100 typically used the number “100” to name themselves "M100SIG", "Portable 100", "Club 100", "Web100", and of course, "Bitchin 100" — and the other, less popular computers got lumped in under the same term by default.     


In the early 1990s, people began using the phrase "Model T" computers, this time explicitly including the whole family. Here is what Gene Wilburn said about the term in 1991:
In the early 1990s, people began using the phrase "Model T" computers, this time explicitly including the whole family. Here is what Gene Wilburn said about the term in 1991:

Revision as of 12:17, 2 April 2026

What's a “Model T” Computer?

“Model T” is an umbrella term which refers to a set of closely related portable computers released by different companies in the early 1980s. While the TRS-80 Model 100 (aka "m100") is the most well-known of the family, it had "sisters" which were designed from the same template but with variations that made them unique and (usually) incompatible.


Model T Computers
Brand Model Nicknames Notes
TRS-80 Model 100 m100 Sold by Radio Shack. Most well-known.
Tandy 200 t200, m200 Larger screen, clamshell case.
Tandy 102 t102, m102, Model 100/102 Nearly 100% compatible with m100.
Kyocera Kyotronic-85 k85, kyo85, KC-85 Possibly the first of the Model T's.
NEC PC-8201 / PC-8201A nec, 8201, n82 "A" version is English variant. Runs N82 BASIC.
NEC PC-8300 nec, 8201, n82 100% compatible with PC-8201. Runs N82 BASIC.
Olivetti M10 ? Stylish.


History of the phrase

Since the 1980s, aficionados of the TRS-80 Model 100 typically used the number “100” to name themselves — "M100SIG", "Portable 100", "Club 100", "Web100", and of course, "Bitchin 100" — and the other, less popular computers got lumped in under the same term by default.

In the early 1990s, people began using the phrase "Model T" computers, this time explicitly including the whole family. Here is what Gene Wilburn said about the term in 1991:

Michael Daigle has dubbed the M100 the “Model T," evoking images of that venerable earlier technology that likewise had a profound impact on our lives. Thanks, Michael. I’m going to borrow your delightful coinage to cover the Tandy 100/102, its younger, heftier brother, the Tandy 200, as well as its cousins, the NEC 8201/8300, Kyocera KC-85, and Olivetti M10.

—Gene Wilburn in Model T Joyride
Portable 100 Magazine, April 1991

Ambiguities

Occasionally, people use "Model T" to mean only the TRS-80/Tandy computers. To emphasize that one is speaking about all of the closely related computers, not just the Radio Shack variants, one can refer to their common DNA with the Kyocera Kyotronic-85. (For example, “Few programs can run on all of the Kyotronic sisters, but this one does.”)

Even less commonly, some people use the phrase "Model T" to also refer to cousins which filled a similar niche, being portable computers from around the same era:


Cousins of the Model T
Brand Model Nicknames Notes
Tandy 600 T600 Larger screen, clamshell case.
Tandy WP-2 WP2 Portable word processor.
Cambridge Z88
NEC PC-8500