joydivision
Well-Known Member
- Reaction score
- 58
- Location
- Manchester, UK
I know it started with the Sinclar ZX series, the VIC20 and of course the C64 and Spectrum which really kicked things off in the UK.
In the USA the Apple II, Tandy TRS, and Commodore Pet had come popular by the late 70's but in the UK the only microcomputer we had was the Acorn Atom.
My dad used to run libraries and he said he noticed around 1980 a lot of people were coming in asking for computer books. He did not buy a computer for himself until 1984 (a C64). He bought it for games and for programming the SID chip via BASIC. This was not an easy task as BASIC did not support any sound commands, you had to use peak and poke to program the SID chip.
The first C64 blew up in about 1987 and we didn't get a new one until 1990, this time a C64C.
By this time the Amiga was really what most people were using in homes in the UK, or an Amstrad if you were doing serious business stuff. I gather in the USA by 1990 the IBM clones were already popular in homes?
In early 1993 I had a decision to make, my parents had a budget of £1000 to buy a new computer and it was up to me to decide what to get. So I set my heart on a new Amiga 1200, however by the time I added the monitor, printer and hard drive the cost was approaching the PC. My cousins had just bought a brand new IBM PS/1 with Windows 3.0 and as soon as I used it I realised it was quite a bit better than the Amiga we ended up buying an IBM 386, 80MB HD and a massive 2MB of RAM.
I would soon regret that decision when I realised most games needed at least 4MB of RAM to play. To me mind it was 1993 when the UK and USA market became the same. For some reason in the UK we were happy with our C64s for around ten years but I think this was because not much else apart from the Atari ST and Amigas were released and it wasn't until the SNES etc came along that it became very out dated.
But I suppose my question is, were many computers been used in at home in the UK before the Vic20 and ZX81 etc? The reason I find this quite interesting is that the UK had the second biggest market in the world for home computers, yet in the late 80's the market the UK seemed to pretty much belong to Commodore but in the USA things were very different.
This thread is purely about home use btw, I realise IBM and the clones were very popular in the UK for business use from the mid 80's onwards but not in homes.
In the USA the Apple II, Tandy TRS, and Commodore Pet had come popular by the late 70's but in the UK the only microcomputer we had was the Acorn Atom.
My dad used to run libraries and he said he noticed around 1980 a lot of people were coming in asking for computer books. He did not buy a computer for himself until 1984 (a C64). He bought it for games and for programming the SID chip via BASIC. This was not an easy task as BASIC did not support any sound commands, you had to use peak and poke to program the SID chip.
The first C64 blew up in about 1987 and we didn't get a new one until 1990, this time a C64C.
By this time the Amiga was really what most people were using in homes in the UK, or an Amstrad if you were doing serious business stuff. I gather in the USA by 1990 the IBM clones were already popular in homes?
In early 1993 I had a decision to make, my parents had a budget of £1000 to buy a new computer and it was up to me to decide what to get. So I set my heart on a new Amiga 1200, however by the time I added the monitor, printer and hard drive the cost was approaching the PC. My cousins had just bought a brand new IBM PS/1 with Windows 3.0 and as soon as I used it I realised it was quite a bit better than the Amiga we ended up buying an IBM 386, 80MB HD and a massive 2MB of RAM.
I would soon regret that decision when I realised most games needed at least 4MB of RAM to play. To me mind it was 1993 when the UK and USA market became the same. For some reason in the UK we were happy with our C64s for around ten years but I think this was because not much else apart from the Atari ST and Amigas were released and it wasn't until the SNES etc came along that it became very out dated.
But I suppose my question is, were many computers been used in at home in the UK before the Vic20 and ZX81 etc? The reason I find this quite interesting is that the UK had the second biggest market in the world for home computers, yet in the late 80's the market the UK seemed to pretty much belong to Commodore but in the USA things were very different.
This thread is purely about home use btw, I realise IBM and the clones were very popular in the UK for business use from the mid 80's onwards but not in homes.