Tandy Corporation is the former name of RadioShack Corporation, a Fort Worth, Texas-based company best known for its RadioShack electronics stores. Tandy was founded in 1919 as a leather supply store, and acquired RadioShack in 1963. The Tandy name was dropped in May of 2000, when RadioShack Corporation was made the official name.
RadioShack was one of the companies (along with Commodore International and Apple) that started the personal computer revolution, with their TRS-80 (1977) and TRS-80 Color Computer ("CoCo") (1980) line of home computers. Later Tandy adopted the IBM PC architecture. Tandy's IBM PC compatibles, the Tandy 1000 and Tandy 2000, were cheaper than the IBM PC and yet featured built-in, and better, sound and graphics. It was only when VGA-standard graphics cards and Sound Blaster sound cards became common in the early 1990s that the Tandys' advanced features became noncompetitive and thus obsolete. Tandy also produced software for its computers running DOS, in the form of Tandy Deskmate.* Tandy even produced a line of floppy disks.
Tandy produced an interactive, multimedia CD-ROM player called the Tandy Video Information System or VIS. Like the Tandy computers, it was based on the IBM PC architecture and used a version of Microsoft Windows.
From the 1970s Tandy operated a chain of RadioShack-style stores in Britain and Australia through its subsidiary InterTAN, under the Tandy name. In 1986, InterTAN became a separate entity though connections between them were still visible. For example, catalog number compatibility was maintained, so the same catalog number in both companies would refer to the same item.
In 1999 the UK stores were sold to Carphone Warehouse, and over the following years have either been closed, or turned into Carphone Warehouse stores. Some of these stores were sold to a new company called T2 which presumably stood for Tandy 2 and had continued the RadioShack style theme. However latterly these stores have closed down and T2 only has an online presence and in some Moto motorway service areas. In 2001 the Australian stores were sold to Dick Smith Electronics (DSE), a subsidiary of Woolworths Limited. A number of these stores have been closed down or rebadged as DSE stores, but around 200 still carry the Tandy name.
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