The vertical drive makes me think that’s a TRS-80 Model II right there:
It sported 80x25 text [monitor] and a single-sided 500 KB 8" floppy drive, and either 32 or 64k of RAM, along with two RS-232 ports and a Centronics-standard parallel port.
And as someone who learned ten-key on a Model M, it’s interesting how many numpads before it were almost completely dedicated to raw data entry, with no ‘+’, ‘-’, ‘*’, or ‘/’ keys anywhere nearby.
The vertical drive makes me think that’s a TRS-80 Model II right there:
Mmmmm, Trash-80.
And as someone who learned ten-key on a Model M, it’s interesting how many numpads before it were almost completely dedicated to raw data entry, with no ‘+’, ‘-’, ‘*’, or ‘/’ keys anywhere nearby.