Was (not was) - I Feel Better Than James Brown
I particularly like the FM synth bassline and ham-fisted sampler action (so 80s!) and the lyrics about Fidel Castro around 3:00. I feel better for posting this. How do you feel?
I particularly like the FM synth bassline and ham-fisted sampler action (so 80s!) and the lyrics about Fidel Castro around 3:00. I feel better for posting this. How do you feel?
Yes, it's another 80s music video. Sorry.
The Sinclair ZX81 was small, black with only 1K of memory but 30 years ago it helped to spark a generation of programming wizards.Packing a heady 1KB of RAM, you would have needed more than 50,000 of them to run Word or iTunes, but the ZX81 changed everything.
It didn't do colour, it didn't do sound, it didn't sync with your trendy Swap Shop style telephone, it didn't even have an off switch. But it brought computers into the home, over a million of them, and created a generation of software developers.
The ZX81 came out when I was at school and I knew a couple of kids with them, but the 1K of memory and black and white graphics meant it was fairly limited. The ZX Spectrum came out a year later and had colour and sound too. It became a top seller, mainly because it was affordable (less than half the price of the BBC, the computer used in schools) and also because of the large amount of software released for it.
My Dad bought our family a 48k Spectrum and I remember nobody else was particularly interested in it, but I really was. It sparked my imagination and I would spend hours playing games and then after a while I got into programming. I started by typing in programs from magazines. Then I wrote my own stuff in Sinclair BASIC and progressed onto other languages like assembly and even a bit of game design in Forth. It was simple stuff, but enjoyable and I can trace my interest in computers back to those days. I was hooked and decided I wanted a job where I could be working with computers all day.
Based on my personal experience, I reckon it was the Spectrum that really introduced a generation of British kids to computers. Funny to think it's nearly 30 years ago - and look how far things have come in our lifetimes.
30 years later, and Pac-Man is still one of the most loved video games ever. Last month, Moleskine celebrated Pac-Man's 30th anniversary with limited edition Pac-Man designed Moleskine journals. Now, Suck UK is making it into the cookie cutter market with these officially licensed Pac-Man cutters. Comes in a pack of 4; one Pac-Man and three ghosts. Buy it here (£12 - $19)
So very 80s, but in a good way.