This week at Flashbak, I also remembered the (strange) occasion in the early 1980s when DC Comics and Radio Shack joined up to promote the TRS-80 computer!
"The Computer Masters of Metropolis" is a story about superheroes, super-villains, and computer-savvy middle-schoolers.
Here's a snippet and the url: (http://flashbak.com/superman-wonder-woman-radio-shackstrs-80-47551/)
"Way back in 1982, Radio Shack -- "the
biggest name in little computers" -- and DC Comics combined forces to
promote home computing, and in particular, the home computer called TRS-80.
Superman and Wonder Woman headline "The Computer Masters of Metropolis," a comic penned by Paul Kupperberg and featuring art by Curt Swan and Frank Chiaramonte.
The tale commences with middle-schoolers
Alec and Shanna – “the computer whiz kids”
-- happily tapping away on their TRS 80s in class, when Wonder Woman arrives
and promises to escort the students to the World’s Fair, being held this year
in Metropolis. The theme of the Fair: science and technological improvements in
the 1980s.
Unfortunately, the evil Lex Luthor will destroy the World’s Fair unless he is paid a billion dollars. And he has incapacitated Superman with dangerous red solar energy! But Alex, Shanna, and the TRS-180 are available to save the day, thereby making the students the “computer masters of Metropolis.”
One of the most interesting aspects of
this promotional comic for Radio Shack and its product is Wonder Woman’s informative
classroom lesson on computers.
“Computers had their beginning in the
United States, when the world's first all-electronic unit was
completed in the fall of 1945,” she explains. Wonder Woman then makes a powerful
prediction: that one day computers will share "everything from
national weather reports to up-to-the-minute news reports from a major wire
services."
People will even be able to "play
games...with people thousands of miles away," and consumers can “can
go shopping through a computerized catalog."
So, absolutely, Wonder Woman predicted the
nature of the Internet!"
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