Timex Sinclair 2068 - The American ZX Spectrum

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  • Опубликовано: 13 июн 2020
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Комментарии • 2 тыс.

  • @RetroGamesCollector
    @RetroGamesCollector Год назад +135

    Once you learn a Sinclair keyboard, muscle memory takes over. When I was 13 I could type out a BASIC program faster on a squishy Speccy keyboard than anyone could on a 'proper' typewriter style keyboard and that was down to the keys having the BASIC commands on them. It only took weeks to master too. I grant you that it is not as easy to learn these things as an adult though 😉

    • @johannkrist
      @johannkrist Год назад +10

      That´s exactly what happened when I was 11 years old programming my ZX spectrum+ Not even thinking about it.

    • @b213videoz
      @b213videoz Год назад +2

      Childhood trauma!

    • @GazzapperGames
      @GazzapperGames Год назад +1

      Mastery of commands was quickly achieved :D

    • @faenethlorhalien
      @faenethlorhalien Год назад +2

      Same!! On a Plus it was easier because you had a dedicated Extend Mode key.

    • @CourtWatchAu
      @CourtWatchAu Год назад +1

      I think it would be cool if modern keyboards had those supplemenarty words on teh keys or above/below etc

  • @FortoFight
    @FortoFight 4 года назад +235

    There's something incredibly cool about playing a wave file on a modern laptop and having an old computer able to load a game from that.

    • @Madness832
      @Madness832 4 года назад +18

      Even cooler was watching someone hook a record player up to a vintage computer to directly load a "Floppy-ROM." That is, an Eva-Tone flexidisc w/ (a) program(s) stored on it.

    • @mrkirk4944
      @mrkirk4944 3 года назад +5

      @@Madness832 Even cooler than that is hooking my Laptop to my 1983 Apple IIe, via the Apple's cassette port in, selecting a wav file disk image on my laptop from the apple disk server website, then watching the Apple format a disk, write the disk image to a 5 1/4" floppy disk, reboot, then boot the disk as if it was the original disk. And all without me having to do anything other than hit a key to reboot. Amazing.

    • @robsku1
      @robsku1 3 года назад +1

      Indeed. I found it even cooler how this was done between real C-64 and an emulator. For C-64 emulators there is a file-format .T64, which represents the contents of a tape - you load one in emulator and tell it to load from it (then did you have to select to press the play button from emulator menu, you did have to do that on the real thing, right?).
      Then there were two programs, one to turn a T64 into a WAV and another to turn WAV into a T64 file. The sound will be different, more robust I would say - probably takes more time to degrade to unreadable than regular... Which is why with some casettes I got in 1999 and after, I recorded them into my computer, made a T64 and then made it back to new WAV file and recorded it on tape again :) Sometimes it even read correctly a recorded WAV that didn't read through with the real C-64 datasette anymore, essentially save the content from a degraded cassette.
      But it was fricking cool, and still is. If you dabble with C-64 cassettes, maybe create new games on an emulator, etc. you should look for this software if you already haven't!
      Disclaimer: I know the video isn't about C-64 - anyone thinking of telling me that this is no use with Sinclair, please don't. You're missing it - and maybe a chromosome too ;)
      Edit: Should have looked through the replies first and I wouldn't have ever used the words "even cooler" in my comment :D I'm not taking them out though - funnier this way :)

    • @38911bytefree
      @38911bytefree 3 года назад +1

      Using a real tape is even cooler !!!!!

    • @lawrence703
      @lawrence703 2 года назад +1

      @@Madness832 I have one of those, it has 3 games, 1 for ZX81, 1 for VIC20 and 1 for Spectrum.

  • @fdmillion
    @fdmillion 3 года назад +77

    Advertising the computer as 72K reminds me of companies advertising a computer today as having "20GB" when it actually has 4GB of RAM plus an Intel Optane caching SSD...

    • @Eddies_Bra-att-ha-grejer
      @Eddies_Bra-att-ha-grejer 3 года назад +1

      They started doing that shit again after so long?

    • @robsku1
      @robsku1 3 года назад +1

      OMG, I did NOT know this was still a thing! :O ...again a thing? Whatever, this is the first time I've heard of this :D I've been amused by the thought that SSD is likely fast enough that emulating my first PC, an IBM PS/1 286 with a megabyte of RAM -space- would work fine by using a file to emulate the RAM :D But SSD as RAM, like having a 16GB of swapping with 4GB of RAM - shouldn't that make the system unusable smoothly when you're going to around 6-10GB's, which seems to be the average with my 20GB (of real RAM) Lenovo ThinkPad...?
      Or is this Intel Optane some super SSD that kinda comes close to RAM speeds? Might be interesting to see if in close future we're going back to how it was in the early days, when storage and RAM were not a separate thing :) But this kind of stuff is just bulls ballsack throwing contest - not cool. Sometimes there has been products doing stuff like that, but not being dishonest like that and advertise more like "4GiB of RAM and a caching SSD combined to give you virtually 20GiB of RAM with nearly indistinguishable performance *small print* _performance may vary depending on use case, not suitable for memory critical operations_ "
      I could be OK about it - I'm not OK about it being advertised *as* 20GB when it isn't.

    • @squirlmy
      @squirlmy 3 года назад

      This has been a problem before options. Sometimes drives are sold as "hybrid" SSD and HDD, which is fine, but some deceptive ads describe drives with ordinary caches, solid state memory that was a very small fraction of the disk memory. I haven't seen much described as "hybrid" lately, but I have seen it for drives sold by third-parties on Amazon and eBay. Uptake just has some fancy algorithms for deciding what's used often enough to be kept on SSD, and what can be dumped and left on the hard drive disk. But it does make mistakes and the benefits are highly dependent on what kind of task the PC is doing. Besides "ram disks", there are swap partitions and swap files, which are basically doing the same thing. That's why in modern Linux, swap size should match ram memory, up to about 8GBs. Years ago the recommended double the ram size. For more than 8GBs ram, well besides for hibernating there's not going to be much use for all that "disk" memory, anyways. That amount of RAM can be easily utilized, the user might consider having no swap at all.

    • @squirlmy
      @squirlmy 3 года назад

      Sorry, I meant Optane, not "options". My tablets not letting me edit that mistake!

    • @christo930
      @christo930 3 года назад +1

      Commodore computers said the same thing. It said 80k on the box, which was 64k of RAM and 16k of ROM.

  • @AtomicShrimp
    @AtomicShrimp 4 года назад +201

    The single keypress based commands on this line of computers is a legacy from the 1K ZX80 - as well as only requiring one keypress to select a command keyword, only one byte is required to store it in memory; furthermore, this makes the BASIC interpreter much simpler (=more compact) to implement as it does not have to parse text as such, and does not have to handle any syntax errors of spelling

    • @gabormiklay9209
      @gabormiklay9209 4 года назад +11

      So, that's why a letter by letter typed Basic command didn't work. It was in 1986 when I used the English version (ZX Spectrum) of this computer, but I still remember I was stuck with this problem for 1 day.

    • @cigmorfil4101
      @cigmorfil4101 3 года назад +16

      The PET, Apple ][, Acorn BBC also only use 1 byte to store each keyword in memory.
      The advantage of the system Sinclair used it that it did syntax checking and only allowed the syntacially correct keywords to be entered: there is no way, for example, to try to enter, say, PRINT FOR with both as keywords; once PRINT is pressed the command keywords are replaced by function keywords. The other micros (mentioned above) just scanned the line and tokenadised it, any syntax checking was left to run time - which the Sinclair machines had already done.

    • @walterg74
      @walterg74 3 года назад +4

      @@gabormiklay9209 your memory is probably foggy, as a word by word command cannot even be typed...

    • @gabormiklay9209
      @gabormiklay9209 3 года назад +2

      @@walterg74 I'm sure it happened, and it could have been done only for 1 command (maybe LET). Too bad I don't have the computer to try it.

    • @pek5117
      @pek5117 3 года назад +2

      Oh Hi

  • @the-xyz-files
    @the-xyz-files 4 года назад +333

    Some Timex 2068 were made in Portugal. All of them sold here had the "unicorn" emulator cartridge bundled for free. We also had the 2048 which was ZX 48K fully compatible.

    • @digiowl9599
      @digiowl9599 4 года назад +19

      @Luis Lopes Modelismo Those +2As etc hilariously came about After Alan Sugar, of Amstrad fame, bought Sinclair Research. At that point you see a very different industrial design, with vastly improved keyboards and integrated storage devices. First the tape player, much like on the CPC 464. But also later a model with a 3" floppy, same as on the CPC 6128.

    • @VMCWD
      @VMCWD 4 года назад +24

      It was with this computer made in Portugal that I entered the world of computers... back in 1987! And never got out of it!

    • @jakubkozakiewicz2061
      @jakubkozakiewicz2061 4 года назад +12

      I had Timex 2048 in Poland where they were sold as well... it would be great to have episode about Times 2048 as well...

    • @zaxarispetixos8728
      @zaxarispetixos8728 4 года назад +7

      @@jakubkozakiewicz2061 you had the communist version?

    • @claudioquintanilla1471
      @claudioquintanilla1471 4 года назад +2

      @@zaxarispetixos8728 Pentagon ???

  • @vwestlife
    @vwestlife 4 года назад +74

    This was the last Sinclair computer sold by Timex in the USA, but it was not the last Sinclair computer sold in the USA -- Sinclair Research in Nashua, NH sold a U.S. version of the Sinclair QL via mail-order in 1985, although obviously it was another failure in the marketplace. Sir Clive's Cambridge Z88 portable computer was also sold here and was somewhat more successful.

    • @spinnetti
      @spinnetti 3 года назад +5

      I didn't know the QL was here! I started my IT passion on a TS1000 and got a 2068 new before moving on to a 1040ST, then TT030 then Macs. Just bought a TS1500 and still coding assembly (games) for the TS1000. Also in for KS2 of the Spectrum next!

    • @olivercuenca4109
      @olivercuenca4109 3 года назад +3

      You know, sometimes I wonder what the world would have been like if old Clive hadn't got the hankering for electric vehicles about forty years too early. Sinclair could've been some kind of early Microsoft/Apple ten years early. Instead he bankrupted himself on a battery-powered bike.

  • @marcosdiez7263
    @marcosdiez7263 Год назад +31

    This was my first computer in Argentina, although I learned with a ZX-81 so I was already familiar with the whole keyboard tokens thing and it was pretty fast to use (in the other hand I began working as a programmer in a company in which I had access to the IBM-PC, some friends later on bought Commodore 64s, a Sinclair QL -what a beauty killed by its tape cartridges-, and few years later I worked on a Logo public workshop with over 30 computers that included Spectrum, TI-994A, MSX, Commodore 64 and an IBM-PC Jr. so having the chance to extensively using what was on the market, and even knowing the drawbacks, I wasn't that unhappy with my 2068).
    As a curiosity, after buying it I found and bought from a book store a 2068 tech manual that included the entire Z80 assembler code for its ROM. I have no clue of how it got there, for it seemed to be a Timex-Sinclair document meant for in house use: it was printed in a light blue recycled paper in an odd font that seemed to be vectorialy drawn, with the covers made in the same paper, so it seemed to be a draft copy, and it was about 10 cm thick, about the size of a white/yellow pages (phone guide) from that time.
    Even later I got a thermal printer lent, it was incredibly noisy and looking trough this tech manual with a friend, we managed to change the internal clock speed hence altering the pitch of the printer noise, so we had the wrong idea of making music with it. We fried some components from the motherboard in the attempt, with a puffing noise and a little cloud of white smoke, and that was the end of my 2068 experience.

    • @marcosdiez7263
      @marcosdiez7263 Год назад

      @@blitzmensch the paper was so thin and low quality, it didn't survive the pass of time. I had to throw it away a couple of years ago, when moving. I took it and noticed the ink was lost, and it was pointless to keep it around anymore.

    • @blitzmensch
      @blitzmensch Год назад

      @@marcosdiez7263 what a pity. Well thanks anyways I guess

    • @marcosdiez7263
      @marcosdiez7263 Год назад

      @@blitzmensch BTW, the "paper" was a book about 10 cm (4 inches) thick made of thin recycled paper layers, a couple thousand pages, glued togheter on one edge, no covers. The whole ROM was listed in Z80 assembler (eg. instructions like LD HL, one per line), plus some text to document blocks of code.

  • @CatsMeowPaw
    @CatsMeowPaw 4 года назад +24

    12:25 Great to see your cat helping with the filming

  • @emmabentley7945
    @emmabentley7945 4 года назад +97

    ''This Old Bird has crashed more times than a Sinclair ZX81 '' ....Kryten

    • @Karlpulford1
      @Karlpulford1 4 года назад +5

      Emma Bentley good old starbug 👍🏻

    • @Amanda_Harper
      @Amanda_Harper 4 года назад +6

      The boys from the Dwaaaaarf!

    • @emmabentley7945
      @emmabentley7945 4 года назад +5

      @@Amanda_Harper Awwwwww................Extrodinary!

    • @TheChenny73
      @TheChenny73 3 года назад

      You’re such a space nerd. Beautiful

  • @jmncoelho
    @jmncoelho 4 года назад +136

    My first computer and where I learned to program!

    • @3dlabs99
      @3dlabs99 4 года назад +6

      Yeah great computer for learing -- taught me assembler :)

    • @ARCWuLF
      @ARCWuLF 4 года назад +4

      The keyboards on these things were always deal breakers for me.

    • @bertblankenstein3738
      @bertblankenstein3738 4 года назад

      I'm sorry to hear that.

    • @haroldlane4647
      @haroldlane4647 4 года назад +6

      My first computer was a Timex/Sinclair 1000. I used simple C64 progs on it till I was able to get ZX81 books for it. I really liked the keyword shortcuts (no thoughtless misspellings to trigger error codes…)
      I suppose an emulator now would need a special keyboard or an overlay but I'm up for it

    • @TheCandoRailfan
      @TheCandoRailfan 4 года назад

      Must've been hell.

  • @guidosmit3197
    @guidosmit3197 2 года назад +8

    In my C64 days I was hardly interested in the alternatives like the Sinclair. But now its a joy to see these machines in action and get the technical backgrounds. This channel is gold, thanks!

  • @noanime5762
    @noanime5762 2 года назад +26

    You know what's cool? Since every ZX Sprectrum software is stored in a sound file, this means that you can load a game from pretty much anything. Phone? Yes. Computer? Yes. Walkman? Yes. Kinda cool ngl.

    • @pookiewookie7679
      @pookiewookie7679 Год назад +4

      Farts? Yes

    • @erebostd
      @erebostd Год назад +4

      It's literally digital analog conversion, nothing more. You could store anything you want on a c64 on a cassette, hell, you could do the same for your current pc... (even if your pc needs software to do that)

    • @johndododoe1411
      @johndododoe1411 Год назад +1

      Unfortunately, Apple ended that

    • @tristan6509
      @tristan6509 6 месяцев назад

      Pretty much all home computers from the early 80s used cassete tapes as a storage medium.
      A C64 costed $600 at release while the 1541 floppy drive was $400.
      It wasn't until the mid 80s that floppy drives dropped in price, though they caught on earlier in the US compared to the rest of the world.

    • @TheTurnipKing
      @TheTurnipKing 5 месяцев назад

      @@erebostd The 8-bit computers ALSO needed software to do it, it was just built in.

  • @EnglishMike
    @EnglishMike 4 года назад +71

    Ah, the days when magazines printed out entire programs for you to type into your computer. The first game I remember typing in was a Basic version of Air Attack for the Commodore Pet in 1980 or thereabouts. I probably still have the magazine somewhere...

    • @mrkitty777
      @mrkitty777 4 года назад

      I member

    • @Caseytify
      @Caseytify 4 года назад +4

      That was true even in the IBM PC era. I recall one issue of Dragon Magazine featuring a BASIC program to generate AD&D 1st Edition characters.

    • @Not-Great-at-Gaming
      @Not-Great-at-Gaming 4 года назад +1

      @@mrkitty777 Pepperidge Farm Remembers

    • @kensmith5694
      @kensmith5694 4 года назад +4

      Yes, and sometimes you would also see one of the articles about what to poke to do interesting things with the hardware. On the ZX80 the whole bus went out on the expansion connector so you could hang some prototype hardware out there and drive it.

    • @Mochrie99
      @Mochrie99 4 года назад +1

      I miss those days, I remember having several books with BASIC programs for the various computers I've had over the years from my VIC-20, to my Tandy 1000SX, and others. Plus I remember subscribing to COMPUTE! Magazine back in the day.

  • @fartontm
    @fartontm 4 года назад +66

    Nostalgia. In my childhood, I had a ZX Spectrum (Leningrad) clone assembled by my uncle.

    • @hutti
      @hutti 4 года назад +3

      How could you write the comment so early !?

    • @lvl90dru1d
      @lvl90dru1d 4 года назад +2

      о, у меня тоже такой был

    • @ouaislem
      @ouaislem 4 года назад +6

      @Hutti06 if you're on his Patreon you get the videos early

    • @EnglishMike
      @EnglishMike 4 года назад +5

      I went for the BBC Micro Model B after working all summer to afford it, and then waiting several months for it to arrive! One of my roommates at uni had a Speccy though, and I remember playing a bunch of Jetpac on it.

    • @rastislavzima
      @rastislavzima 4 года назад +7

      Yep, back then in communists states people used to say "if you don't steal you steal from your children". So because export of high-tech electronics to comm-countries was forbidden, and it was cheaper to steal than to develop own computers, they (mainly ZSSR and CSSR) stole and copied 1-1 the ZX design. In Bulgary they stole Oric Atmos design. There were few exceptions, in the former Yugoslavia they were making Oric Atmos by legaly buying license and parts. They also made few of theyr own computers like Galaxia, Orao, Iskra Delta... Hungary has also legaly imported some Enterprise 128 computers...

  • @countersurprise
    @countersurprise 4 года назад +5

    I had a ZX Spectrum as a kid and it was the first computer I learned to program on. I actually found the preset commands on the keys quite useful when learning - especially if English is a second language. You also knew for a fact the full command set - no hidden commands. All in all, I quite enjoyed learning basic this way.

  • @EgoShredder
    @EgoShredder 4 года назад +5

    As a 12 year old I got used to the keyboard entry system right away, and could type listings in pretty fast within months and I previously had used traditional keyboards on other computers. One thing to remember is that the UK versions had a colour coded system on the keys, which did help to speed up the learning of that entry method.

    • @TheTurnipKing
      @TheTurnipKing 5 месяцев назад +1

      something else that's not always appreciated is that most of the function assignments make some sort of sense. P for PRINT for example. LOAD isn't on L, which is given to LET, which is an incredibly important command for declaring and assigning values to variables in BASIC. Instead, it's on the nearby J. K is closer, but is given over to LIST. another important BASIC command.
      of course, this is all sidestepped in the later 128K Basic which allows letter by letter entry and is preferred on emulation. These machines exist in a particular vacuum of time where the software was expected to be used on these machines.

  • @Desmaad
    @Desmaad 4 года назад +10

    Correction: the SEGA Master System didn't use the GI AY-3-8912; it actually used the TI SN76489, which is similar, but not the same. Also, the AY-3-8912 was the sound chip in the ZX Spectrum 128, +2, and +3 models, supplementing the horrid little beeper from the original Speccy and Spectrum+.

    • @JMDAmigaMusic
      @JMDAmigaMusic 4 года назад

      What Tim Follin did took out from the horrible beeper... :)

  • @grantexploit5903
    @grantexploit5903 4 года назад +185

    16:45 Looking forward to see the electric """car""" in action!

    • @haweater1555
      @haweater1555 4 года назад +32

      The Sinclair C5 was mega-hyped in the UK as a "revolutionary transport device" (much like the Segway), but proved to be just a very underwhelming, lame electric scooter intended to suck up Welsh govenment subsidies.

    • @absalomdraconis
      @absalomdraconis 4 года назад +5

      @@haweater1555 : You beat me to the Segway comparison!

    • @Cemi_Mhikku
      @Cemi_Mhikku 4 года назад +9

      It looks like a less dignified Little Tykes Cozy Coupe.

    • @hibikikensaki
      @hibikikensaki 4 года назад +13

      Right?! It looks so 70s future I love it.

    • @joerhorton
      @joerhorton 4 года назад +6

      @@haweater1555 From my memory, it was ridiculed before it was produced and after it was produced. The media in the U.K. decided to let it fail before anyone had had one. It was a great idea let down by the technology of the time and the "open" design. These are the memories I have as I was around as a geeky teenager at the time :)

  • @GRZNGT
    @GRZNGT 4 года назад +14

    11:30 - I almost fell out of my chair when he pulled MacBook and just put mini jack into it and ran games that way.

    • @KuraIthys
      @KuraIthys 4 года назад +5

      lol. Pretty common trick for systems that stored anything on tape, because the tape is just regular audio tape.
      The only common system this fails with is the Atari microcomputers, because they use a dedicated tape drive over the SIO connection.
      For the longest time I thought this was just for the sake of being proprietary...
      But it turns out it's a cost cutting measure for the computer. (at the cost of making the tape drive do some of the work.)
      SIO is used for a wide variety of peripherals, including purely digital ones.
      So it turns out that the Atari has a DAC, but not an ADC. That means it can put out an audio signal (which it uses when saving to tape), but it can't accept one.
      To get around this with the tape drive, the drive itself actually has two band pass filters tuned to the frequencies used by the tape, and... Feeds the result through the digital input lines...
      Ironically the Atari uses stereo tapes and has an audio passthrough, so you can play cassette audio in sync to your program if you write your tape correctly.
      (think of it as a much clumsier version of CD audio in games.)
      Rarely used, but it's an interesting idea...

    • @TheTurnipKing
      @TheTurnipKing 4 года назад +4

      @@KuraIthys It also doesn't work on the C64 because of the dedicated datasette, unless you have some kind of adaptor.

    • @FSM_Reviews
      @FSM_Reviews 4 года назад +1

      That's a MacBook Air.

    • @FSM_Reviews
      @FSM_Reviews 4 года назад +1

      @wargent99 Yeah. To this day, the new ones still have a Headphone/Microphone combo jack.

    • @yankleber
      @yankleber 4 года назад +4

      You can even do it with your mobile. Every old fart nerds does that nowadays.

  • @captainzeppos
    @captainzeppos Год назад +8

    11:50 I'm getting goosebumps. Jet set willy was probably the very first game I played on a spectrum back in 1986 or so, along with Psssst and Jetpack.

  • @neilomac
    @neilomac 4 года назад +166

    That bit with the game loading with the commentary over the top of it - did anyone else imagine the loading sounds in their head while they watched it? :-)

    • @theplateisbad1332
      @theplateisbad1332 4 года назад +10

      Njäääää....Screeeeetch...Screeeeeeeeetch...

    • @mattsmedley.onehandedgamin9029
      @mattsmedley.onehandedgamin9029 4 года назад +5

      Ooh yeah, as a child of the 70s who grew up in the UK the 48k rubber key speccy was my first machine.

    • @Kara_Kay_Eschel
      @Kara_Kay_Eschel 4 года назад +1

      Had the sound from Guru Lary's videos.

    • @stevethepocket
      @stevethepocket 4 года назад +3

      Shouldn't the loading have been silent, since tape players mute the speakers when the headphones are plugged in?

    • @MarcKloos
      @MarcKloos 4 года назад

      @@stevethepocket nope

  • @JMein13074
    @JMein13074 4 года назад +36

    I weep for the pour souls that would've had to use that keyboard for their typing class.

    • @spodula
      @spodula 4 года назад +8

      In the UK, the BBC micro was used in schools instead of Speccys. (Much to the annoyance of Sir Clive apparently). The BBCs has really good keyboards.

    • @josephkarl2061
      @josephkarl2061 4 года назад +2

      Around about that time, every school kid I knew was learning typing on OG typewriters. If any school had a computer, they had a C64 or some Acorn system with a decent keyboard.

    • @michaelturner4457
      @michaelturner4457 4 года назад +3

      @@spodula Speccys were quite common in primary schools. After Sir Clive protested, and Spectrum became an official computer for UK schools, in addition to the Beeb and RML-380Z.
      Sure the main problem with the Speccy in schools, due to small size it's likely much easier to steal than a BBC Computer or 380Z

    • @random007nadir
      @random007nadir 4 года назад +3

      People didn't use it for typing. It was for writing software, edutainmet (your parents hoped) and playing games. Printers were extremely exotic, expensive, noisy, or used awful silvery thermal paper, so serious typing was usually confined to mechanical and electronic typewriters.

    • @KuraIthys
      @KuraIthys 4 года назад

      The only computer I ever saw in a school prior to High school with dedicated IT classes around 1994, were all Apple II systems...
      Then again I didn't go to any British schools...

  • @DiestroCorleone
    @DiestroCorleone 4 года назад +3

    Let me say it, your content is probably some of the best you can find on RUclips, period. The dedication put to the videos, the research, the edition... Everyting is so polished that I can't complain. There's not a thing I can objectively say 'this can be improved'.
    Congratulations, David. You deserve a place in history, for bringing history to us.

  • @DanLoudShirts
    @DanLoudShirts 4 года назад +3

    We used to spend ages in computer club at school playing Jet Set Willy. It was a marvellous game!

  • @Zeem4
    @Zeem4 4 года назад +84

    You didn't mention the Timex extended screen modes. There's an extended colour mode where the colour cells are 8x1 pixels instead of 8x8. Then there's a monochrome mode of 512x192 pixels, doubling the horizontal resolution. I don't think much software made any use of these though because they're unique to the TS2068.
    I'd expect that the AY sound chip is still accessible with the ZX Spectrum ROM in place, but ZX Spectrum software won't have been written to use it. The 128K Spectrums used the same sound chip, but present at a different I/O port address. There are 48K Spectrum games that use the 128K sound chip, so theoretically it would be possible to patch one of these to use the TS2068's sound chip address.
    The computer also lived on until 1989 in Portugal and Poland.

    • @proudsnowtiger
      @proudsnowtiger 4 года назад +3

      The 512x192 monochrome mode was identical to one in the prototype of Pandora, the portable Spectrum that never made it out before Sinclair sold up to Amstrad. The Pandora screen driver software, which had multiple independent windows and much better font support, was developed in the Sinclair Cambridge labs on a 2068 and an old Zenith green-screen monitor (the same model as you can see in the police chief's office in Bladerunner!) that had been modified to the same (very odd) aspect ratio that the Pandora's flat-screen CRT presented.

    • @famillebouletrouleau
      @famillebouletrouleau 4 года назад +3

      I rememeber i had ported apple ii ‘star trek’ game to the ts2068 using the 512 pixel mode. I wish i still had all the casette for the software I had written for it. Memories...

    • @bobsobol
      @bobsobol 4 года назад +4

      There were 48K Spectrum games that used the AY chip, if it was present on the same IO port as on a 128K Spectrum. I'm suspecting this one probably is, as there were also AY expansions ("Sound Card" if you will) for 48K Spectrums that would make use of this code in games that didn't _need_ the 128K RAM.
      Also, those extra graphics modes were also available in the SAM Coupé, along with one that was true 16 colour, 1 colour per-pixel, from a pretty reasonably pallet selection, but it really needed the faster Z80C processor to use it efficiently. I wonder how good the compatibility may be between Sam Coupé and TS2068 using those modes would be? I would be surprised if porting would be much of a challenge, that's for sure.

    • @MarcKloos
      @MarcKloos 4 года назад +2

      @Alex I have two of these Polish models, one with the standard keyboard and one with 'real' keys.
      I also have this TS2068 and the TC2068. In fact, I have about 30 different Spectrum compatible machines 😁
      beta.collectorsbridge.com/collections/425?page=5

    • @TheTurnipKing
      @TheTurnipKing 4 года назад

      @@bobsobol Sadly, I think it predates the use of the standard audio port of the 128k. Some early AY addons for the 48k existed that used wildly different addresses. Most modern AY sound cards will use the same address as the 128k.
      In theory it might be easier to patch individual games to use the 2068's AY address than phsyically mod the 2068.

  • @3dlabs99
    @3dlabs99 4 года назад +5

    Those shortcut key commands were no problem at all for me back in the day when I was 12 years old. Great computer. It taught me assembler programming and I ended up writing an emulator for it on the PC later on. The ROM in it is very good.

    • @herrbonk3635
      @herrbonk3635 4 года назад +2

      Me too. I bought a new 25 MHz 486 in 1993 just to be able to write the emulator in my beloved high level language, instead of in 286 assembly. But I'm older, I was 17 when I bough my first ZX-80 and 81.

    • @3dlabs99
      @3dlabs99 4 года назад

      @@herrbonk3635 "Beloved high level language".... Turbo Pascal?

  • @DPS_beats
    @DPS_beats 4 года назад +1

    man the idea with the MacBook Air, wave file and audio cable - priceless!

  • @seesoftware
    @seesoftware 4 года назад +16

    5:45 technically speaking, most modern computers still have a text mode which is mostly used in Real mode or beginning stages of Protected mode and can be accessed with bios interrupt commands.

    • @aiqueibao3eeGai9ahki
      @aiqueibao3eeGai9ahki 4 года назад

      Came here to say this. Even UEFI has a text and graphics mode.

    • @lztx
      @lztx 4 года назад +2

      But you wouldn't be using it to watch the video, and you would never go into it after booting your GUI. Unless you forgo X (or other equivalents) and use aaxine or something!

    • @justsomerandompersononthei2595
      @justsomerandompersononthei2595 3 года назад

      Ben Hood haha Linux go full-screen terminal. BTW you can also browse the web and watch videos on that.

  • @MatroxMillennium
    @MatroxMillennium 4 года назад +27

    The game audio will also play out the cassette MIC jack.

    • @The8BitGuy
      @The8BitGuy  4 года назад +12

      Really?! I never thought to try that. I never saw it mentioned anywhere when I googled for how to get line output from a Speccy. I'll have to try that and see if it works on this machine.

    • @MatroxMillennium
      @MatroxMillennium 4 года назад +3

      @@The8BitGuy Yep. ruclips.net/video/Y_Rx3FCODP8/видео.html

    • @rastersoft
      @rastersoft 4 года назад +3

      @@The8BitGuy I had a Sinclair Spectrum 48K and used an external sound amplifier connected to the MIC. In fact, internally the speaker, the MIC and the EAR connections all went through the same ULA pin. Internally the ULA could set that pin to three voltages: one was 0 volts, and the other two were used the lower one for "MIC only output" (to ensure that the speaker didn't make sound while storing a program in the tape), and the bigger one for "MIC and Speaker output". At software level there were two bits in the port 254 for the sound: setting both to zero would set the voltage to 0 (and allow to read data from the EAR connection); setting the MIC bit to 1 would set the pin to low voltage, and setting the SPK bit would set the pin to high voltage. To play a sound, the bit must be changed on-off quick using software.

    • @fffUUUUUU
      @fffUUUUUU 4 года назад +4

      @@The8BitGuy I can't believe you didn't try that just because of common sense

    • @TheTurnipKing
      @TheTurnipKing 4 года назад +2

      @@MatroxMillennium Thinking about it, it was actually a common trick back in the day to get amplified sound from the 48k using the tape deck, but it kind of fell out of favour later with the rise of multiload games and later models sending audio through the RF. IIRC, You'd swap the mic over to the ear, press pause and then play and record, and the tape deck could be used as an impromptu speaker.

  • @willyarma_uk
    @willyarma_uk 4 года назад +45

    The AY sound chip was not used in the master system, that was a SN76489

    • @AmstradExin
      @AmstradExin 4 года назад +4

      He may have confused it with the BBC

    • @Morinaka25
      @Morinaka25 4 года назад +6

      It was also used in later models of Spectrum like the 128, +2 and +3.

    • @NaokisRC
      @NaokisRC 4 года назад +3

      @@AmstradExin It's quite a big jump between the two. But possible. I immediately said "uh, no it wasn't" having programmed said chip in the past, ah well lol

    • @Freewareopoly
      @Freewareopoly 4 года назад

      Hm.. there was also something like Melodik: zxspectrum48.i-demo.pl/aymusic.html .. normal 48k spectrum could play 128k songs.. it was a huge leap..:) There is also now this: hw.speccy.cz/melodik2.html .. so if you have some time.. GO FOR IT :D

    • @willyarma_uk
      @willyarma_uk 4 года назад +1

      Nobodys mentioned the Amstrad CPC

  • @FreihEitner
    @FreihEitner 4 года назад +9

    12:26 - The 8-bit Cat!

  • @dminalba
    @dminalba 4 года назад +5

    When Sinclair released the Spectrum 128k in 1985 it came with with the AY-3-8912 sound chip the 128k BASIC mode had a normal keyboard typing system.

  • @SteveJones172pilot
    @SteveJones172pilot 4 года назад +19

    Definitely need to make a bigger EPROM for those 2 ROMs, with a switch on the top address line to switch between them so you dont have to swap out chips to go between modes!!

    • @TheJeremyHolloway
      @TheJeremyHolloway 4 года назад

      ROM switchers are quite popular on 8-bit Ataris and Commodores, not to mention on the Atari ST. [I'd imagine Amigas have them too].

    • @BertGrink
      @BertGrink 4 года назад

      @@TheJeremyHolloway Yep, Amigas have them too! They were especially needed when the A1200 came out so that you could switch to the old Kickstart ROM, otherwise a lot of older games wouldn't run on the A1200. Even the Amiga500+ and the A600 would have needed a ROM switcher, methinks, due to the Kickstart 2 ROM in those models.

  • @psygn0sis
    @psygn0sis 4 года назад +12

    I'm SUPER excited to see your upcoming video on the Sinclair C5 car!!

    • @DavidLee-df888
      @DavidLee-df888 4 года назад +4

      A recumbent tricycle, powered by a washing machine motor, made IN a washing machine factory...

    • @stephanesonneville
      @stephanesonneville 4 года назад

      An australian guy already made one. Under the hood it's really horrible.

    • @michaelturner4457
      @michaelturner4457 4 года назад

      @@DavidLee-df888 Actually it was made in a vacuum cleaner factory(Hoover). And I don't think the washing machine motor is strictly true, because washing machine motors are 110AC or 230VAC, and the C5 was 12VDC. It basically ran on a car battery, which likely wouldn't have lasted very long. Because lead-acid vehicle batteries are not really designed to handle repeated, charge, discharge, cycles.

  • @cigmorfil4101
    @cigmorfil4101 4 года назад +8

    Both the Spectrum and Apple ][ had "messed up" screens...I don't remember the Apple ][ being classed as cheap.
    The Apple ][ screen mapping is described as deliberately messed up in the manuals.
    Looking at the maps you'll see it's not for cheapness (it's probably cheaper to go from one row to the next like the PET), but for efficiency (and speed) of putting characters on the screen.
    On the Apple ][ the top row is the 1st 40 bytes of the screen RAM, the next 40 bytes are the 40 bytes of the 9th screen row, the next 40 bytes are the 17th row of the screen. The next 8 bytes are off the screen. That's the first 128 bytes of screen RAM
    The next 128 bytes are rows 2, 10, 18 and 8 spare bytes, and so on, with each row in each third of the screen starting 128 bytes after the previous row! The spare 8 bytes in each 128 bytes of the 1024 bytes allocated to the screen are allocated to the peripheral cards (in the slots). This weird mapping is carried over into the high res screen.
    The Spectrum screen is designed for fast character insertion:
    Think of the screen in character cells. For 8 character rows, there are 32 cells across the row, and the next row starts 32 bytes further on in memory, taking 256 bytes of memory.
    But each character is made up of 8x8 pixels. The 8 pixels across are stored in a byte, so 8 bytes,are required for each character. These are stored 256 bytes apart in memory - the second pixel row of a character is 256 bytes in memory after the first row, and so on for each 8 pixel rows. This means that the definition of the character pixels can be stored in 8 sequential memory locations accessible by incrementing the low byte of the memory pointer by 1 each time, but when transferring to screen memory, the locations are I incremented by 256, or an increment of 1 to the high byte of the memory pointer each time.
    The next two blocks of 8 rows follow the same pattern. This pattern makes it easy and quick to convert a screen x,y position to a memory location, and back again, via (fast processor) bit operations (unlike the need to multiply or divide by 40 for, say, a PET), along with reading screen pixel patterns to compare against character definitions.

  • @jfroco
    @jfroco 4 года назад +1

    In Chile we had 4 different ZX Spectrum compatible NTSC microcomputers during the 80s: Timex Sinclair 2068 , Timex Computer 2048, Microdigital TK-90X and Sinclair ZX Spectrum (16K and 48K, NTSC). Both the Timex Computer 2048 and the TK-90X were 99.9% compatible with the ZX Spectrum 48K.

  • @ZILtoid1991
    @ZILtoid1991 4 года назад +60

    The Sega MAster System didn't use the AY-3-8912, instead it used an integrated version of the SN76489.

    • @enigma776
      @enigma776 4 года назад +5

      Quite correct however it is the same chip found in Atari ST computers.

    • @willyarma_uk
      @willyarma_uk 4 года назад +7

      @@enigma776 That was a YM2149, functionally identical though.

    • @onyourjackjones
      @onyourjackjones 4 года назад +1

      Okay I feel like you’re attacking a good video for one mistake

    • @JosephDavies
      @JosephDavies 4 года назад +11

      @@onyourjackjones Correcting a mistake is not "attacking".

    • @onyourjackjones
      @onyourjackjones 4 года назад +1

      Joseph Davies I’m concerned about too much negativity on this video because I’d been asking for this for ages and he’s done it, loads of people said there was a backlash to the last Sinclair video and I was like don’t be silly! But there are a fair few snipey comments on here.

  • @LasiczkaABC
    @LasiczkaABC 4 года назад +60

    When you will record about Commander X16?

    • @gwishart
      @gwishart 4 года назад +1

      He isn't providing any more updates in his RUclips channel. He's only doing so via Facebook - makes it much easier to rake in the cash.

  • @terencehill2320
    @terencehill2320 6 месяцев назад +3

    After 2 years I guess we can say the C5 never made it.

  • @ericmin832
    @ericmin832 4 года назад +2

    my boy dave cruncing out content for us to watch during quarantine, mad respect bro

  • @SpookyFairy
    @SpookyFairy 4 года назад +34

    Those days, I miss them.

  • @SkulShurtugalTCG
    @SkulShurtugalTCG 3 года назад +49

    8:50 So THAT'S where Guru Larry gets his transition card templates from!

    • @hjhiihjjhgguh
      @hjhiihjjhgguh 3 года назад +1

      ti tu tá tu ti tu tá tu tá BLEEEEEEEEMMMMK

    • @pigfish99
      @pigfish99 2 года назад +2

      HELLO, YOU

    • @slacknhash
      @slacknhash 2 года назад +1

      @@pigfish99 Owing to inflation, the list should now be 7.12 Things I Put On Me Bum.

  • @tonyhill2318
    @tonyhill2318 3 месяца назад +2

    My 1st computer! Made me so happy to see it in action after all these years. Those shortcut key commands were pretty annoying...I would program for hours every day as a 12 year old, and never really got fast using them.

  • @scottgray4875
    @scottgray4875 4 года назад +1

    Oh, my God! I had one of these. Talk about a blast from the past.
    My father bought me one from Kmart in 1983, of all places. But, I graduated to an Atari 800XL soon afterward.

  • @AwesomeCorgi
    @AwesomeCorgi 4 года назад +4

    The most feel-good intro on the entirety of youtube! :)

  • @FoxerTails
    @FoxerTails 4 года назад +12

    1:36 Correction! Regarding the Sega Master System, it used a Texas Instruments SN76489 PSG and not the General Instrument AY-3-8912.

  • @NathanCorleone
    @NathanCorleone 4 года назад +2

    It’s great you can bring back the joy we had in those times, thank you

  • @BenHeckHacks
    @BenHeckHacks 4 года назад

    The keyboard is scanned in an amazingly cheap way - 5 row bits read via the ULA port and 8 rows controlled by the high byte of the address bus. Thus 40 keys max.

  • @SuperHammaren
    @SuperHammaren 4 года назад +18

    How about the: SAM Coupé computer, the best 8-bit computer I believe and the last(?) to be released?

    • @jezz2k
      @jezz2k 2 года назад

      It wasn't the last and it wasn't the best. The Spectrum Next is the SAM Coupe we should have had.

    • @SuperHammaren
      @SuperHammaren 2 года назад

      @@jezz2k SAM released in 89, Spectrum in 2017 can really not be compared. I meant among the computers that challenged the 16 bit ones. Spectrum Next is a nostalgic release. I never had one (SAM) so I wanted to know more. Which of the 8-bit computers pre 90 was the best then? Or pre 95? Not newly designed stuff. You can build an improved new T-ford today - I would never buy one.

  • @rdubb77
    @rdubb77 3 года назад +6

    As usual: UK People: "Sinclair is the bees knees I learned programming and such stop hating", 8 Bit Guy and US People: "C64 is Superior."

    • @RW-nr6bh
      @RW-nr6bh 3 года назад +1

      Although probably not least because the Spectrum in the UK is better than the US Timex. Never owned a Spectrum, but my dad had (still has long disused) a ZX81, but moved on to the Oric instead. I knew plenty of people who had Spectrums.

    • @betaman7988
      @betaman7988 3 года назад

      Yeah the C64 was superior but it was also more expensive. In November 1982 a Commodore 64 would've been £299 whereas a 48k Spectrum was £175. A year on, the C64 was now £239 and the ZX was £129. Essentially, it's clear you get what you pay for, but both computers were very good

    • @danboy12342
      @danboy12342 3 года назад +1

      We called it ZX spectrum, it was different, and cheaper, also quite a few had mechanical keyboards

    • @cosmefulanito5933
      @cosmefulanito5933 2 года назад

      MSX.

  • @JJJinks
    @JJJinks 4 года назад

    Duuuude, I'm so stoked for you next video now! Love your intro/outro tunes by the way, feels good

  • @bigbigestwiner92
    @bigbigestwiner92 4 года назад

    I should have said this years ago, but your channel is so good that even though I am not into neither know anything about vintage computers I always enjoy your videos

  • @josepedrocarmo5885
    @josepedrocarmo5885 4 года назад +6

    The C5 = Sinclair's Doom!
    Speaking of ROMs, you can find one or two online that implement a regular keyboard input (similar to ZX Spectrum +2 implementation).
    Anyway, very nice video!

  • @EfftingES
    @EfftingES 4 года назад +6

    Wow, I didnt even know I was still subscribed to this channel! Havent received any of his content on my feed for god knows how long

  • @zeidnasser154
    @zeidnasser154 Год назад

    A really informative and entertaining video that is well done… it gave me the info I needed about the Timex Sinclair 2068 which I’ve always known about but never took the time or found a summarized source about it.

  • @chinosts
    @chinosts 4 года назад

    Another awesome video 8BG... Thanks for all the content.

  • @SteveNoblin
    @SteveNoblin 4 года назад +3

    I had the 1000 and the spectrum. I played with those things everyday back in the 80's. Loved them!

    • @GMC2
      @GMC2 4 года назад

      I had the 1000. Hated the membrane keyboard. Made me appreciate my VIC20 more.

  • @richardturnnidge
    @richardturnnidge 4 года назад +9

    Remember that the ZX Basic language was tokenised, so took up less memory than other computers of the time, where you typed the whole word in, plus meant fewer typos. In your example, PRINT took one byte, whereas on other computers it was six bytes (P, R, I, N, T & SPACE). It also meant that runtime interpretation could be quicker. It very quickly became easy and fast to use.

    • @Toonrick12
      @Toonrick12 4 года назад +1

      Huh. Good point. At a time where every bit counts, that would be a good way to compress space.

    • @cleverca22
      @cleverca22 3 года назад +3

      i believe c64 basic is also tokenized, but it will tokenize when you hit enter, parsing the whole line and replacing cmds with tokens

    • @cigmorfil4101
      @cigmorfil4101 3 года назад +1

      The only computer of the time that I know of which didn't tokenadise its basic was the Acorn Atom, though it did allow abbreviations to cut down memory usage.
      The CBM PETs (and later), Apple ][s, Acorn BBC all tokenadised their programs. Apple's parser was extremely heavy handed in tokenadising every token it could find - useful to avoid entering spaces (which is added back around every token on listing) but a pain when it found a token in the middle of a "long" variable name (IIRC the Apple ][ along with the PETs allowed any length of variable name but only recognised the first two characters).
      PRINT is a bad choice of keyword; both the Apple ][ and CBM machines allowed it to be abbreviated to "?"
      The Acorn Atom and BBC allowed "P." as an abbreviation.
      The CBMs also allowed all keywords to be abbreviated due to how the tokening routine worked - you typed the first few characters and then shifted the next. eg GOSUB could be abbreviated to GOs (with the S shifted, usually producing a heart symbol); when listed the full keyword was there as the token was expanded.
      This did lead to confusion with some people. Specifically the # of PRINT# and INPUT# was part of the keyword. Trying to use ?# as an abbreviation for PRINT# looked ok, but generated a syntax error on running as it was the print token followed by a '#' character. The correct abbreviation was Pr (P followed by shift-R).
      As the # needs to be checked to change the token, INPUT# proceeds INPUT in the list of tokens. Thus "In" generates INPUT#, and there is no abbreviation for INPUT.

  • @AndyLifeInVideo
    @AndyLifeInVideo 4 года назад +2

    Can't wait to see that Sinclair C5!!

  • @martinbennett9908
    @martinbennett9908 9 месяцев назад +2

    You'd be amazed how many UK games programmers started their careers with the ZX Spectrum, including me. The display RAM layout isn't that weird - if you're not crossing one of the boundaries, all you had to do in machine code to get to the next line down was to increase the high byte of the address.

  • @Dee_Just_Dee
    @Dee_Just_Dee 4 года назад +6

    Feels like it's been a while since you've published a video. Super happy to see that you're in good health and spirits. Solid video, as always.

    • @ericsills6484
      @ericsills6484 2 года назад

      If all goes well, the car episode is gonna be one of the next videos....and we're tapping our fingers a year and a half later ;-)

    • @mrb5217
      @mrb5217 6 месяцев назад

      @@ericsills6484 Still tapping

    • @ericsills6484
      @ericsills6484 6 месяцев назад

      @@mrb5217 he said at one of the vintage computer festivals that the car didn't work out.

    • @mrb5217
      @mrb5217 6 месяцев назад

      @@ericsills6484 :(

  • @kins749
    @kins749 4 года назад +4

    The Spectrum was my first computer in the UK, loved it. BTW that's one of the many mods of Jet Set Willy, not the original

  • @mfkman
    @mfkman 4 года назад +1

    This comment is about the speccy vs. C64. As an 8 yr old, the C64 didn't have any graphic commands or commands to make sound. The speccy had lines, circles, and beep commands. As an 8yr old, this was so much easier. I never understood C64 sprites till I was an adult many years later, but did understand "UDGs" on the speccy and also how to make your own fonts. I also thought Z80 was easier than 6502(10) as a 10yr old (though didn't spend much time on C64 assembler, but spent a lot of time on Z80). Main reason for using the speccy is because all of my friends had them. I the UK, there were a ton of peripherals for them, more so than the C64 - different kinds of disk drives, many different printer interfaces, many different joystick and multifunction interfaces where you could store a snapshot of the RAM onto a storage device (tape or microdrive). I do agree that technically, the C64 was the better machine, but as an 8-10yr old in the UK, nobody had a C64, but I knew 10 people that had a spectrum. I never knew anyone that had a Vic20. I don't remember even stores having them.

  • @sprint955st
    @sprint955st 4 года назад +1

    Commodore 64 vs 48k Spectrum was THE school playground rivalry for us British computer kids back in ‘83. We don’t count the BBC Micro because only the rich kids could afford those.
    Hey 8-Bit guy check out ‘Micro Men’ on YT, it’s a retelling of the rivalry between Sinclair and Acorn, and the heat to win the contract for the BBC Micro. But it also shows Sir Clive Sinclair’s obsession with the C5. Great original intercut real TV news from the time about how the U.K. was gripped by the micro boom.

  • @Zerbey
    @Zerbey 4 года назад +69

    You're incorrect about "All Sinclairs" having no option to type commands without using the shortcuts, the Sinclair 128K model introduced 128 BASIC which allowed normal typing. The 48K+ and all subsequent Sinclair branded models also had a vastly improved keyboard, it still wasn't perfect by modern standards but it did the job. When Amstrad took over they improved on the keyboard still further and retained 128 BASIC. In any case, once you got used to the weird shortcut layout you could program very fast, I still remember all the shortcuts decades later!

    • @cigmorfil4101
      @cigmorfil4101 4 года назад +7

      He also seems to have forgotten the Sinclair QL which used a much more structured basic and no keyword entry - you had to type the who lot...mind you it used a 68008 processor, not the Z80 of the previous machines.
      Rumour has it the 68008 was chosen over the 680000 as it was cheaper when designing the machine, but when production was started the 68000 was cheaper. Though it does cut the data bus required in half so would make the PCB cheaper...

    • @jesuszamora6949
      @jesuszamora6949 4 года назад +3

      Well, all Sinclairs up to that point is what he meant. This was very much a history piece.

    • @davidspencer7254
      @davidspencer7254 4 года назад +10

      Well given the Vic 20 was dreadful (I had one for years, thanks), he doesn't understand why the screen layout works the way it does (hint, learn some z80 assembly and think about printing a line of text), he doesn't get the additional screen modes and uses poke rather than plot to make a point and doesn't understand how you read a character at a screen position even though it's in the manual, gets the master system sound chip wrong and uses an assertive tone throughout it seemed much in the same vein as the previous retrospectives on the subject. Sure, come to it with C64 love, come to it thinking that the ViC 20 was a half decent computer (seriously?). But at least ask questions and shoot later.
      Typically I make a rule of not watching 8 bit guy on anything non Commodore as it's so depressingly inevitable. I broke that rule like a fat person going for the Pringles.
      I should have known. Great on many subjects, but sadly this time struck out. But so many people like the video so that's cool too.

    • @digiowl9599
      @digiowl9599 4 года назад +1

      @@cigmorfil4101 More like he focuses on the variants that made it to US shores. The sad thing is that European nations imported way more from USA back then than the other way. So living in Europe you got quite familiar with both local and US computers. But the other way round is not really the case.
      You could notice this in his summary video on storage formats, where the barely touched on the 3" floppy used by Amstrad (Nintendo used a very similar, but incompatible format for their famicom btw).

    • @BertGrink
      @BertGrink 4 года назад

      @@cigmorfil4101 I think the most significant factor in choosing the 68008 for the QL was that it allowed the designers to use standard 8-bit wide memory and support chips, plus that it simplified the layout of the circuit board quite a lot.

  • @andrewgale7731
    @andrewgale7731 4 года назад +49

    “the C64 beats the Timex in every category” ... except in the quality of its BASIC, of course!

    • @bluglouk
      @bluglouk 4 года назад +9

      Poke, poke, poke, poke....was the only command it seemed to understand... basic, my a..... XD

    • @Phantom8Bit
      @Phantom8Bit 4 года назад +3

      Never mind how slow it is. :P

    • @Toonrick12
      @Toonrick12 4 года назад +2

      @@Phantom8Bit Loading from Tape or Disk?

    • @m9078jk3
      @m9078jk3 4 года назад +4

      The TS2068 could display a higher pixel resolution than the C64

    • @lordevyl8317
      @lordevyl8317 4 года назад +6

      Yup. The C16/Plus 4 also had better BASIC than the C64. However, with that said, The old Acorn BBC Micro had probably the best BASIC I've ever used on an 8-bit computer

  • @NathanCorleone
    @NathanCorleone 4 года назад

    Your uploads are the highlight of my week

  • @Sinn0100
    @Sinn0100 3 года назад

    Absolutely fascinating! Brother, you are one of the most knowledgeable guys on all of RUclips. This machine was way before my time and I love learning about this stuff. At any rate, if you were to emulate this microcomputer you could just make extra keys for those commands. You could practically do this almost anyway you want. Yes it will make it a bit more cumbersome but it could be done.
    I would add a shift key function when pressed with the number one for the first set, number 2 for the second set, 3 for the third set, and so on. You could even stack the keys on top of each other so you could essentially flip between the different keys. Hell, you could use a mouse wheel and eliminate my shift key function idea all together.

  • @andlabs
    @andlabs 4 года назад +3

    The Master System used the SN76489 by Texas Instruments (integrated into the video chip), not the AY-3-8912.

  • @eliezermd
    @eliezermd 4 года назад +3

    I've been waiting for this so long

  • @briskypt
    @briskypt 2 года назад +1

    This was my first computer here in Europe. Still got it and running.
    Still love it, with the ZX Spectrum emulator cart.

  • @mmcblk05studio
    @mmcblk05studio 4 года назад

    Congratz on trending, 8bit guy!

  • @timberwolf0122
    @timberwolf0122 4 года назад +5

    The ZX Spectrum was my first real step on the road to a career in IT, I have fond memories of the tape loading noises and less fond memories or R-Tape loading error.

    • @JMDAmigaMusic
      @JMDAmigaMusic 4 года назад

      Or a darn black screen when they did use the poke 23609 to have 24 columns screenshots :(

  • @TsuNAmI2069
    @TsuNAmI2069 4 года назад +9

    Awwww I was hoping you'd do more on the Sinclair computers, especially the one I had, the ZX Spectrum 128k+ (the grey one with included / built in cassete player).
    I know ZX Spectrums weren't that famous in the US but I was still hoping you'd do a video on them eventually... oh well...

  • @johansenphotography
    @johansenphotography 4 года назад +2

    Very nice!! Would love to see an episode about the BBC Micro. Born and raised in the US I had heard little about this but became fascinated upon reading 'Electronic Dreams: How 1980s Britain Learned to Love the Computer' and learning about their national computer literacy project and the BBC producing their own easy-to-use and program computer. Compared to all the PEEKS and POKES I had to put up with as a kid I was shocked to learn how the BBC made the included BASIC easy to use for graphics , music, sounds and thus games. Even the manual (which I recently downloaded to read) was easier and more friendly than either the VIC or C64 manuals; including coding projects to make your own custom charters and code for a lunar lander type game as just one example - wow!

  • @Francesc2000
    @Francesc2000 4 года назад

    I'm from Europe and I had the Spectrum and I remember spending countless hours programming it and playing games that took forever to load. Fun times. 😊

  • @inphanta
    @inphanta 4 года назад +3

    I'm always fascinated to see the American perspective on Sinclair's computers. I was a Commodore 64 head (still am) anyway, but it's still interesting.
    It would be really cool if you could get hold of a BBC Micro - a very popular (and powerful) British home computer that was mostly used in schools and sometimes industry/business.

    • @medes5597
      @medes5597 Год назад

      Chris Curry claims the only American who has ever understood what Sinclair machines were intended to do was Jack Tramiel because he intended the Plus 4 to fill the same niche.

  • @Desmaad
    @Desmaad 4 года назад +3

    It's like they combined the 48k Speccy with the Interface 2 and the sound chip that would go into the later Spectrums.

    • @iangear9943
      @iangear9943 4 года назад +1

      He doesn't mention it & no games supported it, but it also had a couple of improved graphics modes with either higher res attributes (32×192 instead of 32x24) or a mono 512×192 text mode.

    • @TheTurnipKing
      @TheTurnipKing 4 года назад +1

      Which thinking about it begs the question of where the sound chip is actually mapped on the Timex Sinclair. Because there are 48k games and demos that will actually use the 128k sound chip if it's present at the same location it's mapped on a 128k.
      edit: Wikipedia suggests that it's actually mapped at a different address, so would need hardware mods to remap it. A real shame.

    • @Desmaad
      @Desmaad 4 года назад +1

      @@TheTurnipKing Figures, since it predates the 128.

  • @johnbarleycorn_
    @johnbarleycorn_ 4 года назад +1

    I don't know if it's the same on the 2068, but on the original ZX Spectrum line you could get the sound output simply by connecting to the MIC socket as the tape output and speaker shared the same I/O port. While it might have been the last US Sinclair/Timex machine, Sinclair did go on to produce a 128K Spectrum and the QL (targeted at business) before being bought out by Amstrad who released the +2, +2A, and +3 Spectrum derivatives. Amstrad also released the Sinclair PC 200, a CGA PC clone that didn't really have much impact. Under the brand Cambridge Computers, Sinclair also sold the Z88 which was a portable and I think Sir Clive's last computer product.

  • @bluglouk
    @bluglouk 4 года назад

    Hi tech guy do enjoy your videos thanks for all the Sinclair coverage. One advantage of the "keywords" on the Sinclair units, was each had its own "sinclair custom ascii" code. So for example storing the command PRINT only took up one byte in memory not five. Having space savings like this helped allow much larger BASIC programs to be written into the somewhat limited memory.

  • @runvnc208
    @runvnc208 4 года назад +16

    Just one thing to note: there are like 24,000+ ZX Spectrum titles on World of Spectrum. So I think the reason to own a Timex would be to replace the ROM and explore that library.

    • @GeoNeilUK
      @GeoNeilUK 4 года назад +4

      But how many of those games are 128K only? The 128K Speccy had all the extra hardware features that the 2068 had and the 48K didn't, but only 48K RAM while the 128K Spectrum+ had 128K.
      Any Spectrum games that could use the 2068's hardware features probably wouldn't run because of the lack of RAM.

    • @Yukatoshi
      @Yukatoshi 4 года назад

      GeoNeilUK Good question. Probably at least half I’d guess.

    • @Roomsaver
      @Roomsaver 4 года назад

      @@GeoNeilUK Would you be able to swap the RAM chips?

    • @TheTurnipKing
      @TheTurnipKing 4 года назад +4

      @@GeoNeilUK It's quite astonishing how many of those 128k games are actually just 48k games that load all at once. It was really quite late in the life of the system that genuinely 128k only games that couldn't work on 48k at all started appearing.
      FYI, WOS usually lists both 48k and 128k versions on the same page.

    • @TheTurnipKing
      @TheTurnipKing 4 года назад

      @Lassi Kinnunen Actually, it gets you more loading, unless you're really good at the game and are likely to get through the entire thing.
      The 128 versions tend to preload all of the level data, resulting in a longer initial load, the tradeoff for which is that there's no need to multiload later levels.

  • @joebruno2675
    @joebruno2675 4 года назад +3

    I would love to see you work with @Aging Wheels on the Sinclair C5. I wonder how it would compare to the other electric cars he has reviewed.

  • @gilbertsmith123
    @gilbertsmith123 4 года назад +1

    I love the MacGyver job you did with the ROM and audio output!

  • @FCV0511
    @FCV0511 3 года назад +1

    The last thing I expected you to be getting a hold of was a C5. Can't wait to see how it all turns out, along with the rest of the studio build!

  • @discoHR
    @discoHR 4 года назад +8

    05:17 It is possible. For instance, PRINT SCREEN$ (11,16) will print the character on the screen at 11,16.

    • @MarcKloos
      @MarcKloos 4 года назад

      I think it will display the screen colo(u)r attributes of that position, not the character itself.

    • @shaunhw
      @shaunhw 4 года назад +3

      @@MarcKloos
      No, it's the character SCREEN$ returns. It worked by comparing the bitmap on the screen with the bitmaps for the character set in rom. To get the colour there was the ATTR(...) function.

    • @K-o-R
      @K-o-R 4 года назад

      @@shaunhw Ahhh, that's why it couldn't read user-defined graphics.

    • @gwishart
      @gwishart 4 года назад +2

      @@K-o-R It actually compared it with the character set pointed to by a system variable. By default that was in ROM, however you could create your own character set in RAM, point the system variable at it - and SCREEN$ would then work with a custom character set.

  • @cheezenub
    @cheezenub 4 года назад +4

    Even as it wasn't co-marketed by Timex, there is one more computer that was sold in the USA. The Sinclair QL. Heck you could even say there was yet another Sinclair computer, the Cambridge Z88 (based on the Z80) which was made by Cambridge Computer, the new company that Sir Clive started after he sold Sinclair Research to Amstrad. Both were sold in the USA but very few of each were sold. So saying the TS2068 was the last in the line of computers of Sinclair Research sold in the USA is not completely true. Timex left the market after the TS2068 but Sir Clive fumbled along for two more computers in the USA. One more thing. The Sinclair QL was sold as a 32bit computer (it used the Motorola 68008 processor designed to work with 8-bit memory systems.)

    • @mattbland2380
      @mattbland2380 4 года назад

      I recall that the QL was marketed as a "16 bit computer" - not 32 bit?
      [edit: I've found snippets where employees said they would have preferred it wasn't described 32 bit at the launch/pre-launch. archive.org/details/PersonalComputerWorld1984-06/page/126/mode/2up Wow! Talk about stretching the truth! I think they feel back on 16bit as more plausible - in Atari nomenclature it would be an ET 8/32 😆 ]
      You're right of course about the 68008 being designed with the 8 bit memory bus. This was whilst other computers such as the Atari ST, Amiga and Macintosh all used the 'full' 68000 to start with. The ST was named after the 16/32 bit buses on the 68000. Later the TT was 32/32 when they moved up to a true 32 bit chip 68030.
      archive.org/details/PersonalComputerWorld1984-06/page/170/mode/2up
      Computer companies have long cheated with odd 'marketing math' to mislead the uninformed public, such as the '64 bit' Atari Jaguar that had 32 bit CPU and a 32bit DSP (alongwith 64 bit GPU) to make it 'the first 64 bit console'.

  • @tom940
    @tom940 2 года назад

    I just got my hands on one of these. Cant wait to play with it your videos got me hyped lol

  • @cerethpainting6606
    @cerethpainting6606 4 года назад

    Really enjoy your channel!

  • @ZZKJ396
    @ZZKJ396 4 года назад +3

    Ha, your gonna drive a C5, your a braver man than me!

  • @valley_robot
    @valley_robot 4 года назад +3

    thank you for saying zed ecks instead of zee ex, it means a lot to old British computer nerds

  • @toddweber9300
    @toddweber9300 3 года назад

    My first computer was the TS 2068. It was discontinued when it hit the shelves. The $250.00 I had save to purchase it bought the computer, thermal printer and paper, cassette data transfer deck, modem, the few cassette programs and 4 cartridges and a 4k memory expansion. Although learning to program on it was a challenge at first I got used to it. The Extended/Super Basic commands made some things easier to program. One of the TS 2068 users added a 4 megabyte memory expansion for his computer since it uses bank switching. The aftermarket John L. Oliger floppy interface with NMI switch allowed 4 quad density floppies to be connected to memory dump the cassette programs to disks. The TS 2068 also runs all of the TS 1000 software. I opted for the RomSwitch so both the Spectrum and TS 2068 ROMs were installed and used a magnet to switch between them before powering on the computer.

  • @squeaksvids5886
    @squeaksvids5886 4 года назад +1

    Loved the ZX Spectrum as a kid. My dad bought an upgrade kit to give it a more normal plastic keyboard as apposed to the rubber keys.

  • @Aeroman66
    @Aeroman66 4 года назад +3

    The TS, unlike the Spectrum, had 2 extra video modes, it could do 512x192 mono, and 256x192 with one attribute per line, similar to the MSX screen 2.
    The Spectrum line later adopted the AY chip too, but the por mapping was different, and so, incompatible

    • @TheTurnipKing
      @TheTurnipKing 5 месяцев назад +1

      I believe there were some third party addon devices for the 48k that added the same AY chip, but the port mapping on those was all over the place too. The 128k port mapping pretty much set the standard. Theres a fair amount of 48k software that can use the AY chip if it's available at the same place it is on the 128k

  • @Phredreeke
    @Phredreeke 4 года назад +12

    14:20 how much would a RAM expansion cart for VIC-20 cost in 1983? I realise a fully expanded VIC-20 would still have less RAM than a Timex Sinclair but it'd be a lot closer than the 5K of the stock system
    14:40 even with an emulator cart, wouldn't availability of software be greater for the VIC-20 unless you'd resort to importing software from Europe?

    • @vwestlife
      @vwestlife 4 года назад +5

      The comparison the VIC-20 is irrelevant because the TS2068 didn't reach the market until November 1983, by which time the C64 was already selling below $200.

    • @baroncalamityplus
      @baroncalamityplus 4 года назад +2

      I remember buying my 16k expansion cart for the VIC 20 for around $40. I think you could get it cheaper through mail order but I was 12 at the time and had to rely on what my local Commodore store had in stock. Also I think the expansion's original price was $79

  • @jotabe1984
    @jotabe1984 3 года назад

    i was born in 1984 in Argentina and my older brother had a Sinclair 2068... the PC already had a few years of "teenager usage" by 1988/1989/1990 which were the first few years i used it and my real first time aproach to any kind of personal computer. It was a pretty cool experience to load games from cassettes but the user manual was lost somewhere and i didn't have a clew how to do anything except type: LOAD " "
    I know here the Sinclair 2068 was kind of popular, it was kind of a "cheap cousing" of the Commodore 64, but between 1990 and 1992 both NES and 286 became really popular in my country so this was already a piece of history.
    Yesterday i was cleaning some old room full of old stuff and the Sinclair along with about 30 games came out. I have to find a propper compatible cassette player and all the connection cables, but man i'm in for the Nostalgia ride, and once i'm done, i will sell this thing for a juicy prize since it is kind of a collectionable piece of old software

  • @penniesshillings
    @penniesshillings 4 года назад

    Always a great watch David... loved the exit music btw.

  • @Parknest
    @Parknest 3 года назад +17

    Sir Clive Sinclair developed the Spectrum as a programming machine. It just so happened that a lot of software was developed for it.

    • @JeffreyPiatt
      @JeffreyPiatt 2 года назад

      Rare began developing for the spectrum as Ultimate Play. The Rare Replay game pack for Xbox includes a spectrum emulator so you can play those games.

    • @b213videoz
      @b213videoz Год назад

      Sir Clive didn't develop anything himself. He who teally deserves "Sir" title is Steve Wozniack

    • @Parknest
      @Parknest Год назад

      Woz may well be deserving of it but he's American. Sir Clive was more deserving of his knighthood than some I could mention...

  • @10p6
    @10p6 4 года назад +3

    If only Sinclair would have added Hardware sprites and scrolling and included the AY from day one. It would have been "Goodbye Mr. Commodore." To this day though, the Spectrum still on occasion outshines the C64, becoming a sum of more than its parts.

    • @TheTurnipKing
      @TheTurnipKing 4 года назад +1

      Actually, you know what would have made a MASSIVE difference? The ULA is a gnat's wing away from being a fully featured semi-autonomous tile generator, and that would have massively reduced the amount of work required to create scrolling titles.

  • @garrettk.2257
    @garrettk.2257 4 года назад

    Is this the first 8 bit guy episode to get on trending? If so, congrats, and thank God youtube finally put good content on trending.

  • @neopia9
    @neopia9 3 года назад +1

    That intro music sounds just like something you'd hear on an instructional VHS tape that might ship with a system like this!