Last minute gifts from MAKE - Maker Shed gift certificates & gift subscriptions are now available!

Bluetoothing a Trash 80

trs80Bluetooth.jpg
Remember ye ol' Radio Shack TRS-80 Model 100? I used one long after their heyday (when laptop really still meant luggable and battery life was a joke). This thing had wordpro, calendar, a term program, built-in modem, and it ran FOREVER on 4 AA batteries. Eric Gradman recently played a great prank on a new hire at work. He writes on Flickr:

The TRS-80 can run on batteries (this was a major selling point when it was released), but its designers forgot to add wireless capabilities.

I have corrected this shocking oversight by soldering a BlueSMIRF module available from Sparkfun Electronics directly to the HD-6502 UART on the motherboard.

My MacBook pairs with the Bluetooth module and exposes its remote TTL level UART as a device file. I use screen to open this device file, and exec "telnet" to my host of choice.

When Sam walked in this morning, I handed him his TRS-80 laptop with a working login screen to the Linux box... but the TRS-80 was completely untethered!

BTW: The Model 100 still has an active user community, such as the Club 100 user's group.

TRS-80 Bluetooth photoset - Link

Posted by Gareth Branwyn | Nov 13, 2007 11:34 AM
Electronics, Retro | Permalink | Comments (7) | Email This | Bookmark and Share | Digg this!


Recent Entries

Comments

Oldest comments listed first.

Posted by: twospruces on November 13, 2007 at 5:42 PM

hey, looks like a 5V computer attached to a 3.3v bluetooth module. I read the spec and it didn't say that it was 5V tolerant, or did I miss something?

Is it still working?!?!?!


Posted by: twospruces on November 13, 2007 at 5:45 PM

duh, nevermind. looking at the wrong module. this one clearly works with 5V.


Posted by: RussNelson on November 13, 2007 at 10:16 PM

I've thought seriously about re-creating the TRS-80 using a Nokia N800, a bluetooth keyboard, and four Ni-Mh D cells. The only problem is that the display would get washed out in the sun, whereas the TRS-80's display didn't.

But maybe the use case is better addressed by the OLPC?


Posted by: RDAC on November 14, 2007 at 9:27 AM

I heard that writers used these a lot back in the day.


Posted by: garethb2 on November 14, 2007 at 10:21 AM

I sure did. I wrote the entire introduction to Secrets of a Superhacker on a Model 102, while at the beach one summer, as well as a number of my Mondo 2000 and early Wired articles.


Posted by: AleAle99 on December 26, 2007 at 1:36 AM

Hi

great job!!

how have you got the pairing with bluesmirf ?
With ubuntu 7.10 I can't do.... I'm not able!!

ciao

aleale99@yahoo.com


Posted by: Michael Hampton on July 25, 2008 at 6:51 PM

SD card as disk drive(s)

This makes me think of other possible hacks, and it seems to me it should be possible to hack in an SD card reader and have it recognized as disk storage. The hardware part of this would be easy; it's the software that would need to be written to drive such a beast that will be difficult. Anybody interested in tackling this?


Leave a comment


Subscribe to MAKE!Subscribe to MAKE Magazine!

Subscribe today, save 42% and get web access to MAKE free. MAKE Digital Edition is available only to subscribers.

$34.95 / 1 year
(4 Quarterly Issues)

Subscribe now

How-to videos for Makers and Crafers!


Void your warranty, violate a user agreement, fry a circuit, blow a fuse, poke an eye out... Welcome to the Make Blog!



Make: television
The online premiere of Make: television is January 3rd 2009, visit makezine.tv or iTunes to see the entire first episode! The broadcast premiere will follow shortly after depending on when your local Public Television station airs it.

Happy New Year from MAKE!

MAKE's 2009 New Year's message.
What we're making in 2009.


MAKE's RSS feed is here.
Add MAKE to iGoogle - GoogleGoogle.
How to add MAKE to your RSS reader - Real simple.
Add MAKE on Twitter.
MAKE's fan page on Facebook.
Add MAKE on FriendFeed


Advertise here with FM.

Why advertise on MAKE?
Read what folks are saying about us!

Click here to advertise on MAKE!

Subscribe to MAKE Magazine!

Nvidia Rail

Makezine authors!

Phillip Torrone
Senior Editor
Tel: 707-827-7311
Twitter / AIM

Gareth Branwyn
Jonah Brucker-Cohen
Chris Connors
Collin Cunningham
Marc de Vinck
Mike Dixon
Peter Horvath(intern)
Kip Kay
Luke Iseman
John Park
Patti Schiendelman
Becky Stern
Jason Striegel

Suggest a Site!

Current Podcast

itunesdl.gif Weekend Project: Simple Laser Communicator (PDF) Secretly shoot your voice across the room on a laser beam. Thanks go to Simon Quellen Field for the original article in Make: Volume 16 View the PDF... More...

Get the Make blog sent via email

Enter your email to receive the Make blog each day:



WOW! Thanks to everyone involved with Maker Faire Bay Area and Maker Faire Austin in 2008: attendees, makers, exhibitors, sponsors, volunteers, and crew...it was an AMAZING year! Over 1,000 Makers and 87,000+ attendees total! Be sure to check out the photos @ Flickr, and our Maker Faire posts for all the action! Check back for dates for 2009 soon!

Make Categories

www.flickr.com
photos in MAKE More photos in MAKE Flickr Pool
www.flickr.com
photos in Craft More photos in Craft Flickr Pool

Advertise here.
Why advertise on MAKE?
Read what folks are saying about us!

Click here to advertise on MAKE!
Subscribe to MAKE Magazine!

Recent Posts from the Craft: Blog

Recent Posts from the Hackszine Blog