Saturday, 16 April 2011

The Crudity of Early Home Computing

When the frustration of 1K home computing became all too much to bear, I (now regrettably) sold my Sinclair ZX81 for the princely sum of £10 and upgraded to the all singing and dancing Commodore 64.

Most of my friends however went for the lower spec'd SInclair ZX Spectrum. Although the C64 had far superior sound and a fancy way of overlapping sprites without all that colour clashing you got on the spectrum, I never really mastered the art of programming the bloody thing. All those tedious PEEKS and POKES of memory addresses was a whole bunch of no fun, and time that could be better spent waiting for a program to actually load from cassette.

The Spectrum however, with its keyboard, seemingly made from dead flesh, was a much easier piece of kit for me to get my head around.

Perhaps it was because the Spectrum's had its BASIC syntax written out before you on the actual keyboard. Sir Clive even had the wit to add a special shift key to allow the user to apply the relevant operands to extend the usage of the key commands. This made it fairly simply to string together a few lines whose semantics could be successfully interpreted and executed.

Although Sinclair's language constructs were certainly pioneering in their day, it all looks rather crude now.


15 comments:

Billysugger said...

Gosh, those were the days. If you think that was crude, my first computer was a home-built wire-wrapped thing which I programmed in hex after assembling with a pencil! By comparison, the ZX Spectrum was a huge step forward - I even managed to write a digital circuit simulator on it in BASIC, though I lost it after the tape wouldn't re-load it. Happy days...

Suzanne said...

Dyslexic support says,
"..all too much to BEAR"
:-)

Paul S. Jenkins said...

Well I don't know — some people just don't know they're born. When I were a lad we had to program on punched cards, which we punched with a blunt pair of scissors. The cards were then read by holding them up to the light of candle flame...

Crispian Jago said...

@Suzanne,

Now you can see why I managed so much better with the Spectrum

Billysugger said...

Ooh, you naughty tike. Methinks you have doctored that image slightly...

Neuroskeptic said...

Certainly puts the "Ramming" in "Programming".

Sean Ellis said...

As my contribution to the "it was all better in my day, young whipper-snapper" I submit this:

https://groups.google.com/group/comp.sys.sinclair/browse_thread/thread/e95cd92625a4b613/4479558f407536ec?hl=en&ie=UTF-8&q=steve+jewkes#4479558f407536ec

Paul S. Jenkins said...

Ah, Sean. Nostalgia ain't what it used to be.

Sigh...

Anonymous said...

SPECIAL POEM-RANDI'S HEAD

clubconspiracy.com/forum/f29/my-special-poem-randis-head-13401.html

vucko said...

And the famous book for "real programmers":

http://www.amazon.co.uk/Complete-Spectrum-ROM-Disassembly-Logan/dp/0861611160

Anonymous said...

PZ NEEDS HIS MEDS

MINDPHOQUE

clubconspiracy.com/forum/f29/my-special-poem-randis-head-13401.html

Michael Kingsford Gray said...

Programming in hex?
Whippersnappers!
I started out programming in binary (on switch panels) and the graduated to octal.
Hex?
I spit on you.

Adrian said...

sandwich

Phil said...

Gusset Nuzzler. lollage.

Phil said...

Gusset Nuzzler - lollage.