I was only 14 years old when this computer came out. What this girl does is incredible and her channel is one of my favorites. Congratulations, thanks for showing and we want more videos.
Wow, it's amazing to hear that you have memories of this computer from when you were 14! Thank you so much for your kind words and for supporting my channel.
Hello from Victoria BC Canada. Thank you for another interesting project. Your camera work is great and who would have known that watching someone enter a program in basic would be as entertaining as you made it.
You coding snake in basic reminds me of something. 25 years ago, I was in jail. While there, I started my education in electronics. For a while, I got assigned to help with maintenance of electric stuff in the jail I was at. Mostly changing fluorescent tubes and stuff like that. And in the workshop of the master technician, there was a really old PC. It had a monochrome amber screen and not a lot on it. But it had a version of basic. Whithin a few days, I wrote a version of snake all by myself. That made quite the impression with a few people there. And with some more convincing, I was allowed to use a computer in the school block to learn C++ using books I had bought previously. For context for international viewers: this was in a youth jail in Germany around 2000. Probably wouldn't be possible in other places.
Thank you for sharing your story. It's incredible how coding and technology can make such a positive impact in different circumstances. I'm glad my video could remind you of your journey in electronics and programming.
@@Okurka. That is really not important. I did something bad, but that was in the last century. The last millennium even. I'm not going to put that out in public. But I accepted the fact that I had screwed up and had to pay for it. I used the opportunity to get an education. When I eventually got released early on probation, I rented out a room near that jail and finished it. I got the best grades of the class, and never came into conflict with the law again. For years after that, I tried working in the electronics industry, but that is a dying branch in Germany, since almost everything is made in China now. A few years ago I found a good position at a printing company, where I run the small run production and individual items. Mostly embroidery for work wear with company logos, or foil print for sports teams. I turned my profession into a hobby, and I am currently working on a retrobrew board for CP/M.
@@TSteffi Right on dude. We all have bad days and sometimes make a bad decision. What matters is what you are doing right now, and it sounds like you are doing good things these days. Good job. 👍
@@Okurka. That depends on what you see as bad or not. The point is, it doesn't matter for the story. You would have no way to verify it anyways. I really wonder why you think it is important. My guess is that you are the kind of person who would judge me for what I did back then, regardless of what I did with my life since then. You are probably the kind of person who would just ignore 2 decades of paying taxes and living a righteous life, and rather judge me for what happened one night in my teens, and I paid for in full.
This computer changed my life, my friends, my wife, my family, my job,... are that they are today because a CPC464 crossed my path in the summer of 1985. Thak you very much, watching your channel makes me feel a mixture of admiration and pride. Saludos desde España.
Outside the UK, the Amstrad CPC line was quite popular in France and Spain in particular. I, well, my brothers and me had a 6128 back in the late 80's. Saludos de otro español.
Hello from Germany. Great work! I liked to see my very first computer again. In germany it was sold as "Schneider CPC464". I was about 10 years old and spend hours of typing BASIC-lines in this machine and playing games. Thank you for bringing back those memorys!
@@Sayakas_Digital_Attic I am a C64 person, but always liked the design of the CPC464 - the shape, the built in tape drive, and the different but equally nice colour schemes of the Amstrad and the Schneider. Would have ended up wih the latter here in Germany if my peers wouldn't have had a C64 already. I even chose my waching machine becasue of the design. ;-)
Your face of shock & joy when you heard the binary audio squeal from the tape, and when it read the catalogue from the disks -- so cute. And excellent work getting the CPC running.
Nowadays we can scan the basic or assembly code from the books and magazines to preserve them digitally. It’s cool to watch someone code and explain the basic code! 🎉
Great video, thanks for sharing. As many viewers here, I also started programming on a CPC back in the mid-1980ies. This is a flashback into my youth and I am quite grateful for it. I still have my CPC 6128 and I know that I also must fix the floppy disk belt (at least). Back in the day, I taught myself programming not only in that BASIC, but mainly in Turbo Pascal 3.0 on CP/M and even a bit in assembler. The CPCs and their Z80 processor were quite nice machines as they were somehow still simple in their internal structures, but as the same quite capable for the time (and their affordable price). Thanks for bringing this back some mere 40 years later! 😊
This is the computer where I learned to write my first program. I was 8 and I wanted to create videogames. After all those years nowdays I'm making a living making games! Hai fatto commuovere un povero vecchio :D sei una grande continua cosi!
The first frame of this video is almost exactly the same as the last frame 🙂 These videos are really endearing and sort of fulfill my own want to tinker with stuff before my time.
Hi Sayaka, in order to clean the grooves from belt residue you can stretch and run dental floss soaked in alcohol through them, it's very efficient. I do it with my Walkman, works a treat. Best to use the plastic non fiber variety floss, it's tougher and applies more friction. Love your videos sweetie, auguri
I can't imagine being a young person in the 80s fascinated by tech from the 40s. Hey, look at this Slinky! Great job getting that dinosaur working, Sayaka. I think you had a problem with line 230.
My poor partner has no interest in computers at all let alone retro but still sits happily listening to me ramble on for what must seem like decades haha She gets me back with her own topics which isn't quite so fun!
Your videos gets better and better. Top quality on both presentation and technic as usual. Such a cool machine. The amstrads.was not common where I live so my interest for them has just started.
9:00 - 21:45 Reading code, typing code, describing what each piece of the code is doing. *At the same time.* Pls explain how up upgrade internal brain CPU to multi-core because mine is clearly stuck with a single Z80. 0.1 MHz for reference.
Very nice video, I also had the CPC 464 with the 3" drive and later a Vortex 5.25" drive. That was really a good time. I look forward to more videos about the CPC.
Nice work! Storage is important and now you have two working methods. I too was impressed with your ability to explain the program while typing what you were reading. 👍
Wow, you brought back lots of memories for me. I was about 7 years old when I got the CPC464, and eventually began coding from just copying from the manual and experimenting. Frens and I loved it when it was turned off and imagining ourselves piloting a spaceship. Cool channel!
I've always loved the key colours of the 464. I have a 6128 and really love that machine too but wish it still had the keys of the 464 lol. :) another amazing video, keep up the good work :)
Wow. HTF are you talking to the camera explaining how the code works while copying the code from a book? I'm sorry im a usless man that can only focus on one thing but im amazed at how well your explaining the coding while doing other things. And not in your native tounge by the sounds of things. You are also very cute. Cheers for the videos.
I really admire your hardware skills! I had a problem with a broken tape counter on my Amstrad CPC464 last year and I tried to take the cassette player apart, but all I managed to do was disconnect a cable that was soldered to the CPC's speaker. 😦 Fortunately someone with much more experience than me was able to fix it. Typing the _Megaworm_ game brought back memories of spending many hours typing, and playing, listings that were published in magazines. It was my introduction to programming - along with many other viewers, no doubt. It looks like there's an error somewhere in your typing; I doubt the snake should be leaving a trail all over the screen. That was another "fun" aspect of typing listings - trying to debug them...
P.S Sayaka: There's a poker game in the rainbow coloured manual you have next to the monitor to the left, I know this as I compiled it at age 8, in 1989, it's in Basic, took me a few hours to do, if I remember correctly it's in the back of the manual before the appendix off memory. It's a fun little game once programmed, have fun. By the way, love the content, the CPC464 was my very 1st computer in 1988.
Nice to see the CPC getting some love again. I wrote a CPC snake game for an assignment in computer class, way back in 1987. Mine was better than this one 😂 love your videos
Just found this channel,what a refreshing this having a brilliant woman doing it,99%is all men ones I've found,I've subbed and rang the bell,keep up the good work buddy 💯
Locomotive Basic was a very good Basic dialect - In fact back in the mid 80'S my brother and I regularly bought Computer magazines and typed the listings. If you did a typo or changed variables debugging was a nightmare :) But that was how many of us learned programming. After that came Turbo Pascal on the CPC6128 and Amstrad CPW (or "Schneider Joyce" in Germany). Then Turbo Pascal/Borland Pascal on a Schneider "Euro PC", a self built 286, 386SX, 486DX40... until now.
Woah, you are going all in with coding without ChatGPT, that's so cool! :) I saw you making a typo (LENGHT instead of LENGTH) and I was worried the game wouldn't work because of that typo, but I am glad it did work. 😁
@@Sayakas_Digital_Attic, coding can be a real pain in the neck sometimes, especially when a comma has been typo-ed for a dot or a semi-colon instead of a colon. Those mistakes are so hard to find, oof..., but when you find them and de-bug them, hallelujah!🥳 What's even more fun is changing the code, so the game becomes more to your own liking with your own preferences, like different colours or different shapes. You should give it try, 👍
I noticed the LENGHT as well and also X HEAD instead of what should probably have been XHEAD, given the next variable was YHEAD and that XHEAD appeared later in the code. :)
@@willemvandebeek Yep, and I remember there being typos in the magazines as well, making it harder for a little guy to figure out, what was wrong. But it grew those brain cells. In fact, programming as a child was a meaningful, exciting and cozy activity.
If I remember correctly (I'm old..so maybe not), the only thing I didn't like about the CPC 464 was that you couldn't HEAR the program load, like you could with a ZX Spectrum. It was more re-assuring when you could hear it loading... and from the sound you could hear if the cassette tape was getting mangled up inside 😁 Great video!
I think you could on the CPC, I remember when I got one for Xmas 1989 and distinctly remember the tones as I loaded Star Raiders II for the first time, very similar to the ZX spectrum with the header tones and speed loaders. The C64 you couldn't but you wouldn't want to with the loading music!
Great video Sayaka! The Amstrad was a great computer for its price. It had great games and Basic. Never had one though, because i am a Commodore Plus/4 guy!
this is super cool, i used to play on my friend's cpc 464 as a kid :) (it was pretty old at the time, but neither of us had rich enough parents for a SNES or something!)
This was one of my first systems I had.. And I loved it and Learnt soo much about programming in basic and some assembly with z80.. Great times !! Just had a quick look on th e WWW and WOW there quite a following ! Me thinks I might get one again to have some fun with.. Also great content and had a look at your Ch and Sub'd liked and look forward to watching more..
Thank you so much! Yes, the Z80 was an excellent system for many to learn BASIC and Assembly. And thanks for subscribing, I hope you enjoy the upcoming videos!
I considered the Amstrad 464 in 1984, but went for the C64 instead mainly because I was an interactive fiction geek and wanted the Infocom adventures which were not available on Amstrad. Great Video 👍
Great to see you getting into programming as well! While this is not crucial for your program, I remember a technique for BASIC which put subroutines in the beginning (e.g., line 20 rather than 400). The first statement of the program would be a GOTO to jump over the subroutines to the start of the regular program. The reason to place the subroutines at low line numbers in this fashion was to speed up execution. Since BASIC is interpreted, and at least in Commodore BASIC targeting a particular line number (with GOTO or GOSUB) meant to start at the first line and then traverse all lines one by one until the target line number was found, execution was sped up quite a bit by keeping those line number search traversals short. :)
It's fascinating how optimizations like placing subroutines at lower line numbers could speed up execution in interpreted languages like Commodore BASIC!
Only backward jumps result in the interpreter starting at the beginning, in case of a forward jump, the interpreter starts in the following line. So only subroutines that (are time critical and) are called from different, distanced locations should be placed at the beginning.
Really enjoying your videos. This was my first computer and I just bought one again last week. My cassette deck works with some games but not others and I suspect it would benefit from new belts. The speaker is also barely audible so may need swapping. I am excited to make some small repairs and play with the system more.
Your video production has improved so much! Thanks a lot for sharing your process on how you repair the hardware and write software for it. If you had more cassettes could you save the snake program?
I remember typing in BASIC games out of magazines back in the early 80's. I started on the Radio Shack Color Computer (the silver one). That's also when I learned how to solder and did a piggyback 32k RAM upgrade. BYTE magazine was as thick as a phone book back then!
Brava ! That's a great job of reparation and coding. Yes, green color does not work. To fix your monitor problem. If you know an old television repairman, he can help you... The monitor is almost identical. Be careful of high voltages in the cathode ray screen (But you should know that) I use the GBS-8200, which converts the RGB so that it can be read on an LCD screen... It does the job. Otherwise there is the RGB/Scart system, or even an RGB ---> HDMI converter (I haven't tried it yet). In short, you are spoiled for choice... Brava encora and greetings from Savoy (I'm almost Italian). Ciao bella!!!
I really appreciate your suggestions and the recommendations for the GBS-8200 and RGB/SCART converters. Also, in a previous comment, someone mentioned a color calibration procedure for the CTM-640. It's wonderful to have these options to explore!
@@Sayakas_Digital_Attic Ah yes, it makes more sense to take care of the CTM-640 first... Especially if it's just a calibration. RGB to VGA or HDMI and even better to SCART conversion cards are the next option... But we can talk about it again with pleasure, when the opportunity arises :)
nice work! those drives can be a pain, especially if you lose those write protect pins! The monitor repair shouldn't be too bad, I've replaced the DIN cable with a home made one on my green screen to fix issues!
Now I want to listen to some Smashing Pumpkins cassette tape from the 90's 😂 I didn't know you had a second channel. Have you considered using the multi-language audio track feature? Maybe with a reminder to switch language at the beginning of the video. Congrats from Turin 🇮🇹 and keep up the astonishing work
Congratulations in fixing the cassette player of your Amstrad and the disk drives, as well. The PC on the go in now fully functioning, but I don’t see a need of a cassette player, the disk drive make more sense to me, furthermore congratulations on writing your game of snake, it is great coding practice really and seems like a really basic game to play, but really cool to play. In other words cool coding practice. I guess to challenge yourself more is somehow making the code of the game simpler, if possible and further more making a personal application of the game to play in a modern personal computer, I mean how difficult could that be, right? Enjoyed, the video, see you in the next video! 👏👏👏🎉🎉🎉💃👩💻🎮🥰⭐️💎
I find tape storage cool. On my C64s, I use them with speed loader/saver for up to medium sized files, works nice and the more fragile disk drives should have a longer lifetime that way.
Ahh, the DDI-1. Unobtainium, even back in '89. You broke yours, good luck finding another. I did really enjoy my CPC464 but, oh man did I miss BBC BASIC when I got the new machine.
Definitely one of my favorite games that started me off with BASIC. Can you show how to interface it with a modern computer so you can copy a bunch of programs at once and backup whatever you do on the CPC to a modern computer?
Typing and explaining the code in your second language english at the same time is highly advanced. You are a multitasking talent.
Came to the comments to say the same thing... I have a hard time speaking out loud the same exact letters I'm typing xD that's some useful skill!
I would like to know what is your native language Sayaka
@@juanr9446 Look at the channel info. It says Italy.
@@juanr9446Italian
second*
We must protect this girl at all costs.
Sorry, I like her, but I am focused on my cats. Priorities, you know.
fr
@@MrWaalkman I am protecting my rats
@@PauloConstantino167 Probably smarter than my cats... :)
I prefer femminist with hate to every men in the world, and hair colored lol, just kidding.
this is amazing, my first computer back in the 80s and i remember coding like this, its all coming back to me watching this vid :-)
I was only 14 years old when this computer came out.
What this girl does is incredible and her channel is one of my favorites.
Congratulations, thanks for showing and we want more videos.
Wow, it's amazing to hear that you have memories of this computer from when you were 14! Thank you so much for your kind words and for supporting my channel.
A knowledgeable woman, to be sure.
It's cool seeing young people with these old computers
Many great memories of the Amstrad CPC464, thanks for this superb video!
Hello from Victoria BC Canada. Thank you for another interesting project. Your camera work is great and who would have known that watching someone enter a program in basic would be as entertaining as you made it.
Thank you so much for your kind words. I'm really glad you enjoyed the project and the camera work.
This channel is backwards time machine travelling! Thank you for the pleasure!
That is one of the ways we got games in the 80's, finding the code printed somewhere. Another nice retro machine revitalized, good job!
You coding snake in basic reminds me of something.
25 years ago, I was in jail. While there, I started my education in electronics.
For a while, I got assigned to help with maintenance of electric stuff in the jail I was at. Mostly changing fluorescent tubes and stuff like that.
And in the workshop of the master technician, there was a really old PC. It had a monochrome amber screen and not a lot on it.
But it had a version of basic. Whithin a few days, I wrote a version of snake all by myself.
That made quite the impression with a few people there. And with some more convincing, I was allowed to use a computer in the school block to learn C++ using books I had bought previously.
For context for international viewers: this was in a youth jail in Germany around 2000. Probably wouldn't be possible in other places.
Thank you for sharing your story. It's incredible how coding and technology can make such a positive impact in different circumstances. I'm glad my video could remind you of your journey in electronics and programming.
Thanks for sharing the story.
@@Okurka. That is really not important. I did something bad, but that was in the last century. The last millennium even. I'm not going to put that out in public.
But I accepted the fact that I had screwed up and had to pay for it. I used the opportunity to get an education. When I eventually got released early on probation, I rented out a room near that jail and finished it. I got the best grades of the class, and never came into conflict with the law again.
For years after that, I tried working in the electronics industry, but that is a dying branch in Germany, since almost everything is made in China now.
A few years ago I found a good position at a printing company, where I run the small run production and individual items. Mostly embroidery for work wear with company logos, or foil print for sports teams.
I turned my profession into a hobby, and I am currently working on a retrobrew board for CP/M.
@@TSteffi Right on dude. We all have bad days and sometimes make a bad decision. What matters is what you are doing right now, and it sounds like you are doing good things these days. Good job. 👍
@@Okurka. That depends on what you see as bad or not.
The point is, it doesn't matter for the story. You would have no way to verify it anyways. I really wonder why you think it is important.
My guess is that you are the kind of person who would judge me for what I did back then, regardless of what I did with my life since then.
You are probably the kind of person who would just ignore 2 decades of paying taxes and living a righteous life, and rather judge me for what happened one night in my teens, and I paid for in full.
This computer changed my life, my friends, my wife, my family, my job,... are that they are today because a CPC464 crossed my path in the summer of 1985.
Thak you very much, watching your channel makes me feel a mixture of admiration and pride.
Saludos desde España.
Outside the UK, the Amstrad CPC line was quite popular in France and Spain in particular. I, well, my brothers and me had a 6128 back in the late 80's. Saludos de otro español.
Hello from Germany. Great work! I liked to see my very first computer again. In germany it was sold as "Schneider CPC464". I was about 10 years old and spend hours of typing BASIC-lines in this machine and playing games. Thank you for bringing back those memorys!
Thank you for watching! I actually have a Schneider CPC464 too and I even have the original box!
@@Sayakas_Digital_Attic I am a C64 person, but always liked the design of the CPC464 - the shape, the built in tape drive, and the different but equally nice colour schemes of the Amstrad and the Schneider. Would have ended up wih the latter here in Germany if my peers wouldn't have had a C64 already. I even chose my waching machine becasue of the design. ;-)
Take us back to the good ol’ days Sayaka!
By the way your music choice absolutely bang !!! We feel like we are in a previous timescpace which fit the vibe and subject of her videos 🤘🤘🤘
Your face of shock & joy when you heard the binary audio squeal from the tape, and when it read the catalogue from the disks -- so cute.
And excellent work getting the CPC running.
Thank you!
Hi, Sayaka. When your video is on my home page. I have to watch it straight away. As I think they are that good. Stay safe to you and your loved ones.
I like the smell of electronics in the morning.🎞📽😊
@Sketchidraft I like the smell of napalm in the morning.... Classic Line ;)
Nowadays we can scan the basic or assembly code from the books and magazines to preserve them digitally. It’s cool to watch someone code and explain the basic code! 🎉
The typing whilst talking is very impressive!
Talking in her second language even. Mind blowing.
@@ChipGuyyou just have a weak brain.
Great video, thanks for sharing. As many viewers here, I also started programming on a CPC back in the mid-1980ies. This is a flashback into my youth and I am quite grateful for it. I still have my CPC 6128 and I know that I also must fix the floppy disk belt (at least). Back in the day, I taught myself programming not only in that BASIC, but mainly in Turbo Pascal 3.0 on CP/M and even a bit in assembler. The CPCs and their Z80 processor were quite nice machines as they were somehow still simple in their internal structures, but as the same quite capable for the time (and their affordable price). Thanks for bringing this back some mere 40 years later! 😊
This is the computer where I learned to write my first program. I was 8 and I wanted to create videogames. After all those years nowdays I'm making a living making games!
Hai fatto commuovere un povero vecchio :D sei una grande continua cosi!
The first frame of this video is almost exactly the same as the last frame 🙂 These videos are really endearing and sort of fulfill my own want to tinker with stuff before my time.
Thanks for watching and for your kind words!
Hi Sayaka, in order to clean the grooves from belt residue you can stretch and run dental floss soaked in alcohol through them, it's very efficient. I do it with my Walkman, works a treat. Best to use the plastic non fiber variety floss, it's tougher and applies more friction. Love your videos sweetie, auguri
Just casually presenting a video in your 2nd language while accurately copying code from a book. You are a genius!
Thank you!
You make some of the best videos on RUclips. :)
I can't imagine being a young person in the 80s fascinated by tech from the 40s. Hey, look at this Slinky! Great job getting that dinosaur working, Sayaka. I think you had a problem with line 230.
.....this is the kind of woman i need to find. Great work and your knowledge and abilities are impressive to a layman like myself.
My poor partner has no interest in computers at all let alone retro but still sits happily listening to me ramble on for what must seem like decades haha
She gets me back with her own topics which isn't quite so fun!
I found and married a woman like this, would not exchange her for a billion dollars! Best 20 years of my life!
Awesome repair work! Have a wonderful day.
Your videos gets better and better. Top quality on both presentation and technic as usual. Such a cool machine. The amstrads.was not common where I live so my interest for them has just started.
I'm glad to hear you're enjoying the videos and finding the content engaging. It's great that your interest in Amstrads has sparked 😁
9:00 - 21:45 Reading code, typing code, describing what each piece of the code is doing. *At the same time.* Pls explain how up upgrade internal brain CPU to multi-core because mine is clearly stuck with a single Z80. 0.1 MHz for reference.
Haha, upgrading to a multi-core brain CPU is a tricky business! But hey, a Z80 at 0.1 MHz still gets the job done!
Yet another great video Eleonora. Your English is very good, just like your repair skills.
These videos are so helpful. keep up the good work please.
Very nice video, I also had the CPC 464 with the 3" drive and later a Vortex 5.25" drive. That was really a good time. I look forward to more videos about the CPC.
What a great discovery.
It's nice how easy is undertand you for those who aren't English native speakers and the way you explain everything.
Good work explaining the code! It's always useful to understand someone else's code when you have to debug it! 😆
I loved the Roland Games back then! What a time machine
Nice work! Storage is important and now you have two working methods. I too was impressed with your ability to explain the program while typing what you were reading. 👍
I loved my Amstrad CPC464 - it was my first ever computer! Really nice work keeping yours alive!
Wow, you brought back lots of memories for me. I was about 7 years old when I got the CPC464, and eventually began coding from just copying from the manual and experimenting. Frens and I loved it when it was turned off and imagining ourselves piloting a spaceship. Cool channel!
I've always loved the key colours of the 464. I have a 6128 and really love that machine too but wish it still had the keys of the 464 lol. :) another amazing video, keep up the good work :)
the cutening 😍and that attic looks so cozy
I'm watching this video for the 4th time.. I really enjoy how the code is being explained while it's written.
Awesome ! I still have a 464, I love this !
👍thumbs up for the t-shirt 🔥
So smart and cute all in one package. Love to see this young lady working with old computers.
Wow. HTF are you talking to the camera explaining how the code works while copying the code from a book? I'm sorry im a usless man that can only focus on one thing but im amazed at how well your explaining the coding while doing other things. And not in your native tounge by the sounds of things. You are also very cute. Cheers for the videos.
I'm glad you appreciate the way I explain the code while working on it. It can be a bit challenging indeed😅
I love that you say epsilon for 'Y'. Don't let people correct you! It's better than the English word. Make it a trade-mark for yourself!
Upsilon surely.
Gosh the nostalgia for me again ... 😭... love it !
Keep doing what you do. Wholesome, geeky content.
I really admire your hardware skills! I had a problem with a broken tape counter on my Amstrad CPC464 last year and I tried to take the cassette player apart, but all I managed to do was disconnect a cable that was soldered to the CPC's speaker. 😦 Fortunately someone with much more experience than me was able to fix it.
Typing the _Megaworm_ game brought back memories of spending many hours typing, and playing, listings that were published in magazines. It was my introduction to programming - along with many other viewers, no doubt. It looks like there's an error somewhere in your typing; I doubt the snake should be leaving a trail all over the screen. That was another "fun" aspect of typing listings - trying to debug them...
Great video. Got one of these, with the colour monitor, that's been waiting for my attention for some time. This has reminded me to get on with it.
Well done !! :) I love your videos and projects. Keep it up. Those old computers are so fun and interesting :).
Thank you!
How cute it this lady 😊 love the oldschool 8bit stuff, brings back memories. Atari guy here
Its nice to see your happy face when your fixed drives works well ^,^
P.S Sayaka: There's a poker game in the rainbow coloured manual you have next to the monitor to the left, I know this as I compiled it at age 8, in 1989, it's in Basic, took me a few hours to do, if I remember correctly it's in the back of the manual before the appendix off memory.
It's a fun little game once programmed, have fun.
By the way, love the content, the CPC464 was my very 1st computer in 1988.
The zenith of my poker skills was with Strip Poker II on the C64.
Nice to see the CPC getting some love again. I wrote a CPC snake game for an assignment in computer class, way back in 1987. Mine was better than this one 😂 love your videos
Just found this channel,what a refreshing this having a brilliant woman doing it,99%is all men ones I've found,I've subbed and rang the bell,keep up the good work buddy 💯
Locomotive Basic was a very good Basic dialect - In fact back in the mid 80'S my brother and I regularly bought Computer magazines and typed the listings. If you did a typo or changed variables debugging was a nightmare :) But that was how many of us learned programming. After that came Turbo Pascal on the CPC6128 and Amstrad CPW (or "Schneider Joyce" in Germany). Then Turbo Pascal/Borland Pascal on a Schneider "Euro PC", a self built 286, 386SX, 486DX40... until now.
Thank you for sharing your memories! It’s great to hear about your experiences with Locomotive BASIC and how it helped you learn programming.🙂
I'm starting to enjoy your videos very much.
Sei magnifico! Ciao dall'Australia.
Woah, you are going all in with coding without ChatGPT, that's so cool! :)
I saw you making a typo (LENGHT instead of LENGTH) and I was worried the game wouldn't work because of that typo, but I am glad it did work. 😁
Haha, thanks for catching that typo! Good eye! I'm glad the game still worked despite the mistake. 😅
@@Sayakas_Digital_Attic, coding can be a real pain in the neck sometimes, especially when a comma has been typo-ed for a dot or a semi-colon instead of a colon. Those mistakes are so hard to find, oof..., but when you find them and de-bug them, hallelujah!🥳
What's even more fun is changing the code, so the game becomes more to your own liking with your own preferences, like different colours or different shapes. You should give it try, 👍
I noticed the LENGHT as well and also X HEAD instead of what should probably have been XHEAD, given the next variable was YHEAD and that XHEAD appeared later in the code. :)
@@hbasm3271 the more code you need to write, the bigger the chance typos will occur, it's just inevitable. 🤷
@@willemvandebeek Yep, and I remember there being typos in the magazines as well, making it harder for a little guy to figure out, what was wrong. But it grew those brain cells. In fact, programming as a child was a meaningful, exciting and cozy activity.
you explaining as you code was super interesting!
this girl is a gem!
Your shows are really inspiring me to finally COMPLETE my projects 😅 #Thanks
Great content Sayaka! Keep up the great work.
If I remember correctly (I'm old..so maybe not), the only thing I didn't like about the CPC 464 was that you couldn't HEAR the program load, like you could with a ZX Spectrum. It was more re-assuring when you could hear it loading... and from the sound you could hear if the cassette tape was getting mangled up inside 😁
Great video!
I think you could on the CPC, I remember when I got one for Xmas 1989 and distinctly remember the tones as I loaded Star Raiders II for the first time, very similar to the ZX spectrum with the header tones and speed loaders. The C64 you couldn't but you wouldn't want to with the loading music!
Definitely could hear it loading
Great video Sayaka! The Amstrad was a great computer for its price. It had great games and Basic. Never had one though, because i am a Commodore Plus/4 guy!
Thanks for your comment! The Amstrad was indeed a great machine. Unfortunately, I don't have a Commodore Plus/4 myself!
this is super cool, i used to play on my friend's cpc 464 as a kid :) (it was pretty old at the time, but neither of us had rich enough parents for a SNES or something!)
I see Eleonora doing some new retro stuff = I like the video.
🙂
Great video very informative and interesting very helpful as well
This was one of my first systems I had.. And I loved it and Learnt soo much about programming in basic and some assembly with z80.. Great times !! Just had a quick look on th e WWW and WOW there quite a following ! Me thinks I might get one again to have some fun with.. Also great content and had a look at your Ch and Sub'd liked and look forward to watching more..
Thank you so much! Yes, the Z80 was an excellent system for many to learn BASIC and Assembly. And thanks for subscribing, I hope you enjoy the upcoming videos!
I considered the Amstrad 464 in 1984, but went for the C64 instead mainly because I was an interactive fiction geek and wanted the Infocom adventures which were not available on Amstrad. Great Video 👍
Col senno di poi mi sarebbe piaciuto molto avere un CPC464...
P.S. Ottimo video Eleonora! Un piacere guardarti all'opera!
I love yours bangs, you look gorgeous 😍
Thank you!
Great to see you getting into programming as well! While this is not crucial for your program, I remember a technique for BASIC which put subroutines in the beginning (e.g., line 20 rather than 400). The first statement of the program would be a GOTO to jump over the subroutines to the start of the regular program. The reason to place the subroutines at low line numbers in this fashion was to speed up execution. Since BASIC is interpreted, and at least in Commodore BASIC targeting a particular line number (with GOTO or GOSUB) meant to start at the first line and then traverse all lines one by one until the target line number was found, execution was sped up quite a bit by keeping those line number search traversals short. :)
It's fascinating how optimizations like placing subroutines at lower line numbers could speed up execution in interpreted languages like Commodore BASIC!
Only backward jumps result in the interpreter starting at the beginning, in case of a forward jump, the interpreter starts in the following line. So only subroutines that (are time critical and) are called from different, distanced locations should be placed at the beginning.
Ďakujeme.
Thank you for providing such great content.
Man, I hate to be that guy but… I love your hair. It’s so pretty.
Really enjoying your videos. This was my first computer and I just bought one again last week. My cassette deck works with some games but not others and I suspect it would benefit from new belts. The speaker is also barely audible so may need swapping. I am excited to make some small repairs and play with the system more.
You're awesome
So much knowledge
Thanks!
Your video production has improved so much! Thanks a lot for sharing your process on how you repair the hardware and write software for it. If you had more cassettes could you save the snake program?
this channel need more subs !!
I remember typing in BASIC games out of magazines back in the early 80's. I started on the Radio Shack Color Computer (the silver one). That's also when I learned how to solder and did a piggyback 32k RAM upgrade. BYTE magazine was as thick as a phone book back then!
Cool you get al fixed! I think there is still a bug in the Megaworm code, as it does not wipe out the trail.
That's a sweet keyboard!
Brava ! That's a great job of reparation and coding. Yes, green color does not work. To fix your monitor problem. If you know an old television repairman, he can help you... The monitor is almost identical.
Be careful of high voltages in the cathode ray screen (But you should know that)
I use the GBS-8200, which converts the RGB so that it can be read on an LCD screen... It does the job. Otherwise there is the RGB/Scart system, or even an RGB ---> HDMI converter (I haven't tried it yet).
In short, you are spoiled for choice...
Brava encora and greetings from Savoy (I'm almost Italian). Ciao bella!!!
I really appreciate your suggestions and the recommendations for the GBS-8200 and RGB/SCART converters.
Also, in a previous comment, someone mentioned a color calibration procedure for the CTM-640. It's wonderful to have these options to explore!
@@Sayakas_Digital_Attic Ah yes, it makes more sense to take care of the CTM-640 first... Especially if it's just a calibration.
RGB to VGA or HDMI and even better to SCART conversion cards are the next option...
But we can talk about it again with pleasure, when the opportunity arises :)
Music is from Out Run ???? Circa 1987 )))))) for the Atari ST! Maybe not but sound similar! I 🥰 ❣ 💓 YOUR CHANNEL !!!!
nice work! those drives can be a pain, especially if you lose those write protect pins!
The monitor repair shouldn't be too bad, I've replaced the DIN cable with a home made one on my green screen to fix issues!
Thanks! Those drives definitely have their challenges but it's always satisfying to get them running again.
The CPC464 is a good machine with the strong locomotive basic 😊
I've one 🎉
EXCELLENT video! 😉
Your superpowers have evolved to master mechanics as well..
Neat repair! Thanks!
Simply amazing!!! Nice vid thank you.
Now I want to listen to some Smashing Pumpkins cassette tape from the 90's 😂 I didn't know you had a second channel. Have you considered using the multi-language audio track feature? Maybe with a reminder to switch language at the beginning of the video. Congrats from Turin 🇮🇹 and keep up the astonishing work
Congratulations in fixing the cassette player of your Amstrad and the disk drives, as well. The PC on the go in now fully functioning, but I don’t see a need of a cassette player, the disk drive make more sense to me, furthermore congratulations on writing your game of snake, it is great coding practice really and seems like a really basic game to play, but really cool to play. In other words cool coding practice. I guess to challenge yourself more is somehow making the code of the game simpler, if possible and further more making a personal application of the game to play in a modern personal computer, I mean how difficult could that be, right? Enjoyed, the video, see you in the next video! 👏👏👏🎉🎉🎉💃👩💻🎮🥰⭐️💎
I'm glad you enjoyed seeing the repairs and the Snake game development! :)
@@Sayakas_Digital_Attic 🥰👩💻
I find tape storage cool. On my C64s, I use them with speed loader/saver for up to medium sized files, works nice and the more fragile disk drives should have a longer lifetime that way.
I completely forgot how ugly that Amstrad Basic was to write, lol. Great video!
Absolutely great. Thank you!
Ahh, the DDI-1. Unobtainium, even back in '89. You broke yours, good luck finding another. I did really enjoy my CPC464 but, oh man did I miss BBC BASIC when I got the new machine.
Definitely one of my favorite games that started me off with BASIC. Can you show how to interface it with a modern computer so you can copy a bunch of programs at once and backup whatever you do on the CPC to a modern computer?
Super Sayaka
Very good!