Home & Garden12 mins ago
Best Home Computer From The 1980S?
Hi all. I've managed to get my BBC micro up and running. What was everyones (of a certain age lol) favourite home computer from the 1980s? I loved creating my own games as well as playing them. The BBCs excellent Basic programming language made game creation great fun. It was also fast as I never got round to learning machine code. Happy memories!
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by TTG. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.The school I taught at used BBC Model B computers, networked by a server. I certainly enjoyed playing around with them.
However my first home computer was an Atari 1040 ST. When purchased with some peripherals (such as a games joystick, which I never used), it cost me about £200 from a franchise operating within Selfridges. However I then paid about £250 to buy a single DTP program (Pagestream), which came on about a dozen floppy disks. (I later added an external hard drive, with a massive 80Mb of storage).
Interestingly though, I've still not found a single feature in the mighty QuarkXpress (currently requiring 2GB Ram and 2GB minimum disk space) that wasn't available in Pagestream (on a dozen floppies and running on 1Mb RAM).
However my first home computer was an Atari 1040 ST. When purchased with some peripherals (such as a games joystick, which I never used), it cost me about £200 from a franchise operating within Selfridges. However I then paid about £250 to buy a single DTP program (Pagestream), which came on about a dozen floppy disks. (I later added an external hard drive, with a massive 80Mb of storage).
Interestingly though, I've still not found a single feature in the mighty QuarkXpress (currently requiring 2GB Ram and 2GB minimum disk space) that wasn't available in Pagestream (on a dozen floppies and running on 1Mb RAM).
In the early '80s the firm I worked for replaced all of the dumb terminal keyboards with BBC B models which gave some advantage not apparent to the users. A couple of years later they gave them away to schools and replaced them with Ataris which gave the user some independence from the mainframe for spreadsheets and other stuff. One of the main reasons for the move to BBC B's was that at the time they cost considerably less than a "computer keyboard"
Related Questions
Sorry, we can't find any related questions. Try using the search bar at the top of the page to search for some keywords, or choose a topic and submit your own question.