Sunday, February 13, 2022 This is being written on my Tandy 1000TX, using Norton Textra Writer 2.0, an older version of Textra than what I am used to. My usual go to is Textra 7.0, which despite being released in 1994 should still run on this Tandy 1000TX - the problem is, my copy of Textra 7.0 uses a disk-based installer that relies on 1.44Mb 3.5" floppies and the 1000TX can only handle 720Kb 3.5" floppies. Theoretically I could have just copied it over from a machine on which I have already installed it, but as I mentioned in my last post, they're all put away at the moment. This 1000TX also has a fully-functional 360Kb 5.25" FDD, which means I could have probably made some disks for Textra 6.0 (1991), but it comes on like 5 360Kb diskettes which would eat up a pretty significant chunk of my known-good blank double density 5.25" floppies. Norton Textra Writer 2.0 (1989) is a stripped-down version of Textra sold to schools through the W.W. Norton publishing company - but more importantly, it does not require an installer! I was able to simply copy the executable over and be done with it. I am very pleased with this machine - despite not exactly having the best reputation historically, the Tandy 1000TX seems to have been built relatively solid, but it is still very simple to get into and work with. I acquired this machine bone stock, with no expansion cards, no coprocessor, and only 640K of RAM. I have since maxed out the RAM at 768K, added a 10Mhz 80287 coprocessor, an I/O card for a second serial port and the option of a full-fat parallel port instead of the Tandy's odd edge connector 'printer port,' as well as an XT-IDE / CF-IDE combo card as a storage solution. I decided against a graphics card, opting to instead rely on the onboard Tandy Graphics Adapter, and opted-out of a networking card in favor of using the serial port for connectivity. Since I don't have a TGA-compatible monitor or a landline, I am using an MDA/CGA/EGA to HDMI convertor I acquired from TexElec for my Tandy graphics and a WiFi-capable serial modem emulator I acquired from TheOldNet for getting online via BananaCom. My next steps for this machine are to install a SmartWatch+, a Dallas clock module alternative for the Tandy 1000 series that uses regular coin batteries so I don't have to keep keying-in the time and date at start up, and to replace the I/O card I have installed with one a little more useful for this machine - the current card has some conflicts with the built-in Tandy functions. My long-term hope was initially to use this machine as my dedicated 'retro-terminal' for BBSing and etc, but there are a couple short-comings that another machine I recently found might be able to better address, so now I think my plan is just to use this as my XT-era games machine. If I get feeling really froggy though, I might try to install ELKS at some point, haha. -Prokyonid