Monday, November 25, 2024

ZX Spectrum: The computer that became a 1980s icon

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Created by Sir Clive Sinclair and his team, the ZX Spectrum hit the high street in April 1982.

It followed the hugely successful, if more technically-limited, ZX81, which had been many people’s first encounter with home computing.

The ZX Spectrum’s games were downloaded via a cassette player and displayed on a TV screen – and they were in colour, unlike its monochrome predecessor.

It cost £175 for the 48k model and £125 for the 16k version, which put it on many Christmas wish lists.

“If you go back a few years to the 1970s, you’ve got a time where home computers didn’t exist,” said Anthony Caulfield, co-director of the new documentary.

“Computers were in mainframes with air conditioning and cost many millions of pounds or dollars to create.

“The whole concept of having a computer in your home was a completely new thing.”

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