Texas Instruments 99 4a. Retro Ordenadores Orty Ordenador Texas Instruments TI99/4A NTSC (1983 The Texas Instruments TI-99 4A, introduced in 1981, was a pivotal moment in home computing history In 1978, Texas Instruments released the Speak & Spell educational toy, which included breakthrough speech synthesis technology developed at TI
TI99/4A by Texas Instruments Retro 8Bit Computers from www.retro8bitcomputers.co.uk
It came out somewhere around the same time as the Commodore VIC-20 Although The Texas Instruments TI 99/4a was a contemporary of the Apple ][, Atari 800 and much of the Radio Shack line it wasn't nearly as successful as those computers
TI99/4A by Texas Instruments Retro 8Bit Computers
[2] Based on Texas Instruments's own TMS9900 microprocessor originally used in minicomputers, the TI-99/4 was the first 16-bit home computer In 1978, Texas Instruments released the Speak & Spell educational toy, which included breakthrough speech synthesis technology developed at TI Here's a shot of the Computer Closet's complete TI 99/4A system with Peripheral Expansion Box (PEB) with one 5 1/4" floppy disk drive, 32K RAM expansion, RS-232 card, Flex Cable Interface, and Disk Manager 2 cartridge
Texas Instruments TI99/4A TimeLine Computer Archive. [3] The associated TMS9918 video display controller provides color graphics and sprite support which were only comparable with those of the Atari. The TI-99/4 and TI-99/4A are home computers released by Texas Instruments in 1979 and 1981, respectively
texas instruments TI99/4A HD Wallpapers and Backgrounds. When the TI-99/4A was introduced in 1981, Texas Instruments claimed it was both "a major breakthrough in computer technology," and, probably more important, the "lowest priced, 16-bit computer available." It cost only $525 Here's the TI 99/4A original color display box: Texas Instruments Advertisements