Technology
Culture
Games
Computing
Film
Home computing and the gaming industry have their origins in the iconic early
80s hardware, documented here in an homage to an eccentric pioneer
You’ll need a pretty high geek tolerance level for this very detailed and
specialised account of Sir Clive Sinclair’s bestselling ZX Spectrum home
computer, whose appearance in 1982 with its rubbery keys was thought to be as
lovably eccentric as the man himself. But with this he revolutionised the
market, educated the British public about the importance of computing, and
virtually created the gaming industry from scratch. It was originally to be
called the “Rainbow” in homage to its groundbreaking colour graphics; Sinclair
instead insisted on “Spectrum” as it was more scientific-sounding.
Interestingly, the film shows that Sinclair’s flair for the home computing
market arose from his beginnings in mail order and assembly kits for things such
as mini transistor radios targeted at “hobbyists”, that fascinatingly
old-fashioned word. His first home computers were available as kits and to the
end of his days, he was more interested in hardware than software; perhaps this
intensely serious man never quite sympathised with the gaming culture that drove
his product around the world.
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