Amazing what we already had by then: video games, colour television, answering machines, digital recorders or satellite television for example. It's just you had to be really rich, really technical or insanely into them to feel the need.
Somehow this thread makes me sad.
It's history and it's till lukewarm. I wish i could save all that stuff and make a museum and preserve it for all eternity. There is a lot of reasons why i can't do this.
Had a choir in my heart and had to kill it to survive.
Vosla wrote:I wish i could save all that stuff and make a museum and preserve it for all eternity.
No doubt the Science Museum in London already has. Only a fraction of its exhibits are on display, the rest are crammed into six huge hangars far from the public gaze.
What he would lose in size he could make up for in expense! Or, to compromise, these more modestly priced early 'home' computers would be easier on the wallet:
If that article mentions a Basic Extension called "BC Basic" (possibly by Kuma?), then I went to school with the guy who wrote it (his name was Brian Candler). He was quite a way ahead of me in school, but I was in the same year as his sister...