I can assure you that S-10 and T-10s do NOT have negative Ackermann. Hundreds of steering ratio tests GM runs on its' own vehicles and competitors also produce Ackermann MEASUREMENTS. There are quite a few with parallel steering (up to high steer angles) but no anti. Some of this is fuel economy (coastdown) and some is tire wear (scrub in turns).
The reason for having anti-Ackerman (toe-out in turns) is quite clear: to get more from grip ("side-bite") from a pair of tires for which, because of load, camber and slip conditions, causes the inside tire to fight the force and moment signs from the outside tire. This depends on the tires, though, so a tire test is required, usually for a situation where VERY large load capacity tires are used on a lightly loaded vehicle.
Couple of drawbacks, though: More front grip reduces the front cornering compliance and lowers the vehicle's understeer recipe. Confused drivers, magazine airheads, and book writers will blame this on the change, not the true cause being that an equivalent change should/ought to be made in the rear to maintain the same steering gain (g's per 100 deg/steer at at a prescribed speed). Given two brands of tires of the same size pressure and rim width, its possible to get 2 opposite recommendations. It depends on the tire's load sensitivity (a math based property) and is dependent on construction features and parts (shoulder stuff).
Then there is a the reality of whether you want to push on a tierod with the highest internal force, or pull on it? Pushing on a limp you-know-what is not as keen as pulling on it, so extra beef is mandatory. Otherwise the working Ackermann is not the same as the AutoCad version because of buckling and gear mount issues.
Run some tests, do some simulated cornering maneuvers and build from there.