Radio Shack hanging on like a loose tooth
File: makezine.com I confess that I always loved going to Radio Shack. From the days Radio Shack carried the latest in CB radios, portable 8-track tape players, turntables, receivers and smaller televisions, I was fascinated with what the then-electronics leader carried. Little would I realize just a few years after the CB radio craze, Radio Shack carried one of the first computers that one could purchase for the home. Known as TRS-80, millions were mesmerized by the “invention.” Back in the early 80s, there was no way that my family could afford such an “entertainment” device like the TRS-80 or the then-hot Commodore 64. To me, Radio Shack’s TRS-80 was good for one thing. My friends and I visited a Radio Shack with our Super 8 film camera to include the computer as a prop in one of our films shot in summer 1982. Still, computers were becoming a necessity rather than a luxury as time passed. I was jealous of those who could own a home computer because they had word ...