MediaWiki:Sitenotice:
2024-03-02: The wiki ran out of disk space, so things were not working. This has been resolved by adding another 5GB of quota ;-) Thanks to Tim Lindner for reporting the issues.
2020-05-17: If a page gives you an error about some revision not being found, just EDIT the page and the old page should appear in the editor. If it does, just SAVE that and the page should be restored. OS-9 Al (talk) 12:22, 17 May 2020 (CDT)
Bob Rosen: Difference between revisions
mNo edit summary |
No edit summary |
||
Line 2: | Line 2: | ||
Bob Rosen was the owner of [[Spectrum Projects]], a company based in Woodhaven, New York which sold many products for the Color Computer. Bob was formerly a salesman and store manager for Radio Shack. [[Spectrum Projects]] ran ads in all the major CoCo magazines until February 1988. In May of 1984, [[Spectrum Projects]] and Bob Rosen moved to San Jose, California until April of 1985 when he returned to New York. | Bob Rosen was the owner of [[Spectrum Projects]], a company based in Woodhaven, New York which sold many products for the Color Computer. Bob was formerly a salesman and store manager for Radio Shack. [[Spectrum Projects]] ran ads in all the major CoCo magazines until February 1988. In May of 1984, [[Spectrum Projects]] and Bob Rosen moved to San Jose, California until April of 1985 when he returned to New York. | ||
[[Spectrum Projects]] started life as ''CONNECTION-80'' in 1982, selling the popular Colorcom/E | [[Spectrum Projects]] started life as ''CONNECTION-80'' in 1982, selling the popular [[Colorcom/E]] [[telecommunications]] software. Original products included a Light Pen, the Spectrum Remote Reset, Spectrum DOS, the Spectrum Voice Pak, and more... | ||
He was Sysop of the CONNECTION-80 BBS OF Woodhaven, New York which later became the | He was Sysop of the CONNECTION-80 BBS OF Woodhaven, New York which later became the four-line Rainbow BBS systems which ran on TRS-80 Model III computers using TBBS software. BBS #5 went on-line in San Jose, CA in August 1984. The four lines in Woodhaven, NY stopped operation in March 1985. | ||
Rosen and his CONNECTION-80 BBS were profiled in the [https://colorcomputerarchive.com/repo/Documents/Magazines/80%20Micro/1982/80%20Micro%20-%208206%20-%20June%20&%20July%201982.pdf June/July 1982 issue] of ''[[80 Micro]]'': "Bob Rosen-A Colorful Success Story" by Kerry Leichtman, p. 174. | Rosen and his CONNECTION-80 BBS were profiled in the [https://colorcomputerarchive.com/repo/Documents/Magazines/80%20Micro/1982/80%20Micro%20-%208206%20-%20June%20&%20July%201982.pdf June/July 1982 issue] of ''[[80 Micro]]'': "Bob Rosen-A Colorful Success Story" by Kerry Leichtman, p. 174. |
Revision as of 18:51, 24 February 2024
WELCOME |
---|
Looking for CoCo help? If you are trying to do something with your old Color Computer, read this quick reference. Want to contribute to this wiki? Be sure to read this first. This CoCo wiki project was started on October 29, 2004. --OS-9 Al |
See Recent Changes. | About this site. | Join the E-Mail List or Facebook Group. | Contact me with updates/questions.
This page was last updated on 02/24/2024. Total Pages: 744. Total Files: 994.
Bob Rosen was the owner of Spectrum Projects, a company based in Woodhaven, New York which sold many products for the Color Computer. Bob was formerly a salesman and store manager for Radio Shack. Spectrum Projects ran ads in all the major CoCo magazines until February 1988. In May of 1984, Spectrum Projects and Bob Rosen moved to San Jose, California until April of 1985 when he returned to New York.
Spectrum Projects started life as CONNECTION-80 in 1982, selling the popular Colorcom/E telecommunications software. Original products included a Light Pen, the Spectrum Remote Reset, Spectrum DOS, the Spectrum Voice Pak, and more...
He was Sysop of the CONNECTION-80 BBS OF Woodhaven, New York which later became the four-line Rainbow BBS systems which ran on TRS-80 Model III computers using TBBS software. BBS #5 went on-line in San Jose, CA in August 1984. The four lines in Woodhaven, NY stopped operation in March 1985.
Rosen and his CONNECTION-80 BBS were profiled in the June/July 1982 issue of 80 Micro: "Bob Rosen-A Colorful Success Story" by Kerry Leichtman, p. 174.
He wrote several columns for The Rainbow's "Hint" column. He also wrote articles for The Color Computer Magazine.
After folding Spectrum Projects in 1988, Rosen went on to run a sports card and memorabilia business called Spectrum Sports.
(Much of the information above is from the CoCo Chronicles)
Articles
Title | Magazine | Month | Year | Page |
---|---|---|---|---|
Hook Your CoCo Up to Your Home VCR | The Rainbow | October | 1982 | 128 |
The New TDP-100: A Glimpse at CoCo's Future? | The Rainbow | February | 1983 | 154 |
Hello World! | The Color Computer Magazine | March | 1983 | 14 |
The TDP System 100 | The Color Computer Magazine | March | 1983 | 62 |
This Will Program Your Keys on Professional Keyboard | The Rainbow | June | 1983 | 80 |
The Dragon is Coming | The Rainbow | September | 1983 | 113 |
Communicating with Your Color Computer | The Rainbow | November | 1983 | 192 |
My CoCo Is Not IBM Compatible | The Rainbow | October | 1984 | 238 |