- published: 13 Oct 2008
- views: 13414
8:27
Sinclair ZX80 vintage home computer. Collectors item.
Featured on http://www.retrogamingcollector.com/Retro-Computers/SinclairZX80.html
A short...
published: 13 Oct 2008
Sinclair ZX80 vintage home computer. Collectors item.
Featured on http://www.retrogamingcollector.com/Retro-Computers/SinclairZX80.html
A short video on the vintage Sinclair ZX80 home computer. A rare collectors item.
- published: 13 Oct 2008
- views: 13414
2:24
Sir Clive Sinclair recalls "his" ZX story (ZX80, ZX81, ZX82, ZX Spectrum) in 2004
Sir Clive Sinclair recalls and tells "his" ZX story (ZX80, ZX81, ZX82, ZX Spectrum) in thi...
published: 31 Aug 2010
Sir Clive Sinclair recalls "his" ZX story (ZX80, ZX81, ZX82, ZX Spectrum) in 2004
Sir Clive Sinclair recalls and tells "his" ZX story (ZX80, ZX81, ZX82, ZX Spectrum) in this 2004 TV documentation.
- published: 31 Aug 2010
- views: 1983
2:45
Sinclair ZX80 Flicker Free Pacman
Here is a brand new flicker free game for the Sinclair ZX80, which demonstrates just how s...
published: 30 Aug 2010
Sinclair ZX80 Flicker Free Pacman
Here is a brand new flicker free game for the Sinclair ZX80, which demonstrates just how sophisticated its programs could be. The game is a fully featured version of a well known arcade classic and runs on the standard 4K ROM ZX80 with a 16KB RAM pack fitted.
- published: 30 Aug 2010
- views: 2851
9:17
ZX81 MANIC MINER HIRES GRAPHICS ZX80
Whoosh! Who would have believed this? Manic Miner for the good old ZX81? And it's great to...
published: 14 Sep 2009
ZX81 MANIC MINER HIRES GRAPHICS ZX80
Whoosh! Who would have believed this? Manic Miner for the good old ZX81? And it's great too! Eleven screens of hi-res graphics! One of the best games ever for this lovable little computer! The very rare Hi Res ZX81 version of Manic Miner was possible because the ZX81 display was generated primarily by software in the ZX81 ROM, it was possible to override the interrupt service routine and generate the display oneself. Several "hi-res" (meaning, 256×192, rather than 64×48) games exist on this computer, but came out too late to save it from its big brother, the ZX Spectrum.
Considering the limitations of the machine, this game is a minor miracle!
As with the ZX80, the processor was a NEC Zilog Z80-compatible, running at a clock rate of 3.25 MHz, but the system ROM had grown to 8192 bytes in size, and the BASIC now supported floating point arithmetic. It was an adaptation of the ZX80 ROM by Steve Vickers on contract from Nine Tiles Ltd, the authors of Sinclair BASIC. The new ROM also worked in the ZX80 and Sinclair offered it as an upgrade for the older ZX80 for a while.
The base system as supplied had 1 KB (KB) of RAM. This RAM was used to hold the computer's system variables, the screen image, and any programs and data. The screen was text only, 32 characters wide by 24 high. Blocky graphics with a resolution of 64 by 48 pixels were possible by the use of the PLOT command, which selected among a set of 16 graphics characters. The ZX81 uses a resizeable display-file (screen buffer) meaning that it can be expanded or shrunk depending on the amount of installed memory and the amount of free space at the moment.
The ZX81 was originally sold via mail order in kit form requiring soldering (priced at £49.95) or assembled (£69.95 or US$100 in the US). A later deal with high street retail W.H.Smith saw the ZX81 and all accessories being sold on the high street (ZX81 was £69.99, ZX 16K RAM pack £49.99, ZX Printer £49.99)
This game plays extremely well and is available to download from my website, http://www.mjscomputers.net/arcade2.html
- published: 14 Sep 2009
- views: 17679
2:14
ZX80 playing a tune through a radio!
A Sinclair ZX80 playing a tune through a radio tuned to 750KHZ - all done through interfer...
published: 27 Jun 2009
ZX80 playing a tune through a radio!
A Sinclair ZX80 playing a tune through a radio tuned to 750KHZ - all done through interference!
- published: 27 Jun 2009
- views: 1015
1:42
Sinclair ZX80 Robot 1981
From 1981, a maze-solving robot fashioned from a ZX80.
The ZX80 was a cheap computer ma...
published: 22 Jul 2011
Sinclair ZX80 Robot 1981
From 1981, a maze-solving robot fashioned from a ZX80.
The ZX80 was a cheap computer manufactured by Sir Clive Sinclair.
It evolved into the ZX81 the forerunner of the ZX Spectrum.
- published: 22 Jul 2011
- views: 459
3:33
Sinclair ZX80 BASIC Programs and Cassette Load Demo
This is a short demo of the Sinclair ZX80. Two short BASIC programs are entered to show e...
published: 03 Apr 2011
Sinclair ZX80 BASIC Programs and Cassette Load Demo
This is a short demo of the Sinclair ZX80. Two short BASIC programs are entered to show editing peculiarities and speed. Also shown is a cassette load of a commercial program for budget analysis. It's surprising what passed for commercial software in those days. A TRS-80 cassette drive is used for tape loading. The RF out from the ZX80 is fed into a VCR where it is demodulated for composite out and displayed to an LCD flat panel TV.
- published: 03 Apr 2011
- views: 842
4:48
Sinclair ZX80 Flicker-Free Kong
Here is another brand new flicker free game for the Sinclair ZX80, which further demonstra...
published: 11 Sep 2010
Sinclair ZX80 Flicker-Free Kong
Here is another brand new flicker free game for the Sinclair ZX80, which further demonstrates just how sophisticated its programs could be. The game is a fully featured version of a well known arcade classic and runs on the standard 4K ROM ZX80 with a 16KB RAM pack fitted.
- published: 11 Sep 2010
- views: 1917
1:17
Sinclair ZX80/ZX81 story, Rick Dickinson recalls in 2003
Rick Dickinson worked as industrial designer for Sinclair Research in the 80's designing t...
published: 31 Aug 2010
Sinclair ZX80/ZX81 story, Rick Dickinson recalls in 2003
Rick Dickinson worked as industrial designer for Sinclair Research in the 80's designing the cases of the ZX81, ZX Spectrum and QL series of computers as well as Sinclair's Flat Screen TV and Sir Clive's later Cambridge Z88 computer.
Rick has put some pictures of his work "Sinclair ZX days" on flickr. A must see for all Sinclair fellows!
http://www.flickr.com/photos/9574086@N02/collections/72157608812198325/
- published: 31 Aug 2010
- views: 1575
0:42
Sinclair ZX80 playing Space Invaders at the Vintage Computer Festival 2010
Quick video of a real Sinclair ZX80 computer playing Space Invaders at the Vintage Compute...
published: 21 Jun 2010
Sinclair ZX80 playing Space Invaders at the Vintage Computer Festival 2010
Quick video of a real Sinclair ZX80 computer playing Space Invaders at the Vintage Computer Festival 2010 at Bletchley Park.
You can see that the screen does not flicker when a key is pressed.
This computer was on "The Centre for Computing History" display. See http://www.computinghistory.org.uk
The TV is a JVC Videosphere.
- published: 21 Jun 2010
- views: 3046
0:51
Sinclair ZX80, ZX81 and MK14 - Flicker Free Breakout on the ZX80
This video was taken at the Spectrum 30 event on the 8th and 9th September 2012. It featur...
published: 10 Sep 2012
Sinclair ZX80, ZX81 and MK14 - Flicker Free Breakout on the ZX80
This video was taken at the Spectrum 30 event on the 8th and 9th September 2012. It features the Sinclair ZX80 playing a flicker free version of breakout, the ZX81 with the ZXpand SD card interface and the very rare Science of Cambridge MK14 ...
- published: 10 Sep 2012
- views: 355
Vimeo results:
12:13
100 Riffs (A Brief History of Rock N' Roll)
Alex Chadwick plays 100 famous guitar riffs in one take giving you a chronological history...
published: 04 Jun 2012
author: Chicago Music Exchange
100 Riffs (A Brief History of Rock N' Roll)
Alex Chadwick plays 100 famous guitar riffs in one take giving you a chronological history of rock n' roll.
See the full detailed list of all the artists, keys, and year of each song played in the 100 riffs: http://www.chicagomusicexchange.com/100riffs
Alex plays a 1958 Fender Strat: http://goo.gl/g37oT
1 Mr. Sandman - Chet Atkins
2 Folsom Prison Blues - Johnny Cash
3 Words of Love - Buddy Holly
4 Johnny B Goode - Chuck Berry
5 Rumble - Link Wray
6 Summertime Blues - Eddie Cochran
7 Pipeline - The Chantays
8 Miserlou - Dick Dale
9 Wipeout - Surfaris
10 Daytripper - The Beatles
11 Can't Explain - The Who
12 Satisfaction - The Rolling Stones
13 Purple Haze - Jimi Hendrix
14 Black Magic Woman - Santana
15 Helter Skelter - The Beatles
16 Oh Well - Fleetwood Mac
17 Crossroads - Cream
18 Communication Breakdown - Led Zeppelin
19 Paranoid - Black Sabbath
20 Fortunate Son - Creedence Clearwater Revival
21 Funk 49 - James Gang
22 Immigrant Song - Led Zeppelin
23 Bitch - Rolling Stones
24 Layla - Derek and the Dominos
25 School's Out - Alice Cooper
26 Smoke on the Water - Deep Purple
27 Money - Pink Floyd
28 Jessica - Allman Brothers
29 La Grange - ZZ Top
30 20th Century Boy - T. Rex
31 Scarlet Begonias - Grateful Dead
32 Sweet Home Alabama - Lynyrd Skynyrd
33 Walk This Way - Aerosmith
34 Bohemian Rhapsody - Queen
35 Stranglehold - Ted Nugent
36 Boys Are Back in Town - Thin Lizzy
37 Don't Fear the Reaper - Blue Oyster Cult
38 Carry on My Wayward Son - Kansas
39 Blitzkreig Bop - The Ramones
40 Barracuda - Heart
41 Runnin' with the Devil - Van Halen
42 Sultans of Swing - Dire Straits
43 Message in a Bottle - The Police
44 Hey Hey, My My (Into the Black) - Neil Young
45 Back in Black - AC/DC
46 Crazy Train - Ozzy Osbourne
47 Spirit of Radio - Rush
48 Pride and Joy - Stevie Ray Vaughan
49 Owner of a Lonely Heart - Yes
50 Holy Diver - Dio
51 Beat It - Michael Jackson
52 Hot For Teacher - Van Halen
53 What Difference Does It Make - The Smiths
54 Glory Days - Bruce Springsteen
55 Money For Nothing - Dire Straits
56 You Give Love a Bad Name - Bon Jovi
57 The One I Love - REM
58 Where the Streets Have No Name - U2
59 Welcome to the Jungle - Guns N' Roses
60 Sweet Child 'O Mine - Guns N' Roses
61 Girls, Girls, Girls - Motley Crue
62 Cult of Personality -Living Colour
63 Kickstart My Heart - Motley Crue
64 Running Down a Dream - Tom Petty
65 Pictures of Matchstick Men - Camper Van Beethoven
66 Thunderstruck - AC/DC
67 Twice as Hard - Black Crowes
68 Cliffs of Dover - Eric Johnson
69 Enter Sandman - Metallica
70 Man in the Box - Alice in Chains
71 Smells Like Teen Spirit - Nirvana
72 Give it Away - Red Hot Chili Peppers
73 Even Flow - Pearl Jam
74 Outshined - Soundgarden
75 Killing in the Name - Rage Against the Machine
76 Sex Type Thing - Stone Temple Pilots
77 Are You Gonna Go My Way - Lenny Kravitz
78 Welcome to Paradise - Green Day
79 Possum Kingdom - Toadies
80 Say it Ain't So - Weezer
81 Zero - Smashing Pumpkins
82 Monkey Wrench - Foo Fighters
83 Sex and Candy - Marcy Playground
84 Smooth - Santana
85 Scar Tissue - Red Hot Chili Peppers
86 Short Skirt, Long Jacket - Cake
87 Turn a Square - The Shins
88 Seven Nation Army - White Stripes
89 Hysteria - Muse
90 I Believe in a Thing Called Love - The Darkness
91 Blood and Thunder - Mastodon
92 Are You Gonna Be My Girl - Jet
93 Reptilia - The Strokes
94 Take Me Out - Franz Ferdinand
95 Float On - Modest Mouse
96 Blue Orchid - White Stripes
97 Boulevard of Broken Dreams - Green Day
98 Steady As She Goes - The Raconteurs
99 I Got Mine - Black Keys
100 Cruel - St. Vincent
*Shot on a Nikon
3:41
Typophile Film Festival 5 Opening Titles
Handcrafted with love by BYU design students and faculty, for the 5th Typophile Film Festi...
published: 01 Sep 2009
author: Brent Barson
Typophile Film Festival 5 Opening Titles
Handcrafted with love by BYU design students and faculty, for the 5th Typophile Film Festival. A visual typographic feast about the five senses, and how they contribute to and enhance our creativity. Everything in the film is real—no CG effects!
Shot with a RED One, a Canon EOS 5D Mark II, a Canon EOS 40D, and a Nikon D80.
Stop motion created with Dragon Stop Motion.
Creative Director & Faculty Mentor:
Brent Barson
Writing & Storyboarding:
Brent Barson, Jessica Blackham, Analisa Estrada, Meg Gallagher, John Jensen, Regan Fred Johnson, Colin “The Pin” Pinegar
Construction, Paint & Glue:
Brent Barson, Wynn Burton, Analisa Estrada, Meg Gallagher, Olivia Juarez Knudsen, Casey Lewis, Reeding Roberts, Deven Stephens, Brian Christensen (Brain Sculpture)
Animators:
Brent Barson, Wynn Burton, Analisa Estrada, Meg Gallagher, Olivia Juarez Knudsen, Reeding Roberts, Deven Stephens
Cinematographer:
Wynn Burton
Editing:
Brent Barson, Wynn Burton, Analisa Estrada, Meg Gallagher, Reeding Roberts
Hand Models:
Analisa Estrada, Meg Gallagher, Olivia Juarez Knudsen, Deven Stephens, Michelle Stephens
Original Music:
micah dahl anderson - www.micahdahl.com
Special thanks to Joe, Jared, Zara, and the Punchut/Typophile crew for enabling this!
3:57
Big Ideas (don't get any)
Video by James Houston
jim@1030.co.uk
www.1030.co.uk
www.twitter.com/1030
--------
Sincla...
published: 02 Jun 2008
author: James Houston
Big Ideas (don't get any)
Video by James Houston
jim@1030.co.uk
www.1030.co.uk
www.twitter.com/1030
--------
Sinclair ZX Spectrum - Guitars (rhythm & lead)
Epson LX-81 Dot Matrix Printer - Drums
HP Scanjet 3c - Bass Guitar
Hard Drive array - Act as a collection of bad speakers - Vocals & FX
1:10
CHOP CUP
Design and Direction : www.weareom.com
Lighting by David Lee : www.davidleedop.com
Product...
published: 27 Sep 2009
author: WeAreOm
CHOP CUP
Design and Direction : www.weareom.com
Lighting by David Lee : www.davidleedop.com
Production by studioset : www.studioset.tv
Post Production by :weareom:
Sound by Alin Flaidar - studioset.tv
Starring Vlad Grigorescu - vladgrigorescu.com
PHOTO'S http://www.flickr.com/photos/43038809@N02/
Making of - http://www.vimeo.com/6858264
Youtube results:
20:48
WORLD'S FIRST: Low Cost Computer Made in 1980
The Sinclair ZX80 was a home computer brought to market in 1980 by Sinclair Research of Ca...
published: 27 Sep 2012
WORLD'S FIRST: Low Cost Computer Made in 1980
The Sinclair ZX80 was a home computer brought to market in 1980 by Sinclair Research of Cambridge, England. It was notable for being the first computer available in the United Kingdom for under a hundred pounds (a price tag of £99.95, to be exact). It was available in kit form, where purchasers had to assemble and solder it together, and as a ready-built version at a slightly higher cost for those without the skill or inclination to build their own unit. The ZX80 was very popular straight away, and for some time there was a waiting list of several months for either version of the machine. The machine was designed around a Z80 central processing unit with a clock speed of 3.25 MHz and was equipped with 1 KB of static RAM and 4 KB of read-only memory containing the Sinclair BASIC programming language, editor, and operating system. The ZX80 was replaced by the ZX81 in 1981.
Waterproof
The slogans in Sinclair's advertising of course emphasized the low prices. But, of course, the ZX80 had also other advantages. With its compact plastic case and membrane 'keyboard' the ZX80 was waterproof, so using the computer and drinking beer at the same time was also a possibility provided by Sinclair.
Also handy were the multifunctional keys, with which whole Basic-commands could be entered by one touch.
M K Kiani
- published: 27 Sep 2012
- views: 316
2:47
zx80 music radiohead.mp4
I recut this to start out at 1m 09 secs. I did not make this and am re-uploading for those...
published: 24 Mar 2012
zx80 music radiohead.mp4
I recut this to start out at 1m 09 secs. I did not make this and am re-uploading for those who want to see the nitty gritty. I claim no copyright to this. :)
- published: 24 Mar 2012
- views: 274