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Comment Re:Alternate timeline... (Score 1) 376

Our school (in Finland) had a TRS-80 model I, on which I learned my first assembly language programming skillz. My dad had a model III. I myself did some contracting work when 15yrs old on a model 16, which was actually an I/O / modem bank front-end for an order processing system on an IBM system 38, with mobile clients using the model 100, sending the orders in and getting their itineraries back using slightly modified XMODEM-protocol.

So the short answer. Yes, they were available outside of USA and not just as the Dragons (which were rebranded Tandy/TRS-80 color computers.)

Comment Re:Alternate timeline... (Score 1) 376

Actually, Amiga would have been also a very valid choice back then, at least in Europe. I wonder if Linus ever said why he went with a PC.

Lack of MMU, perhaps?

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Comment Re:Alternate timeline... (Score 1) 376

If he had bought a Trash-80, would we all be programming Motorola chips today?

Maybe, but it wouldn't be because of the TRS-80, which had a Zilog Z80 CPU.

I beg to differ - I've written C on TRS-80 model 16 with XENIX - it had MC68k and Z80 for bootstrap, which was used as I/O co-processor once the 68k system was up, It also had dual 8" floppies, and an 8MB (!!) hard disk which was larger than a modern desktop PC chassis.

Also the parent got the time wrong - affordable i386-based systems didn't really co-exist with TRS-80 - and the price of a Trash - even a Z80-based model would've definitely been more than you'd be able to buy with your Xmas cash in Finland those days.

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Comment Re:Breaking News (Score 1) 334

The pieces are here- google to find software solutions that already automatize exposing this data in the linked data web (won't shamelessly plug the one I'm working for:)

FOAF http://www.foaf-project.org/
SIOC http://sioc-project.org/

If someone hosting your data space (if it's not yourself) proves to be a jerk, you just take your data and shove it elsewhere.

No walled gardens. No silos.

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