“Digital Retro : The Evolution Of The Personal Computer”

October 23rd, 2004 by Mark Rittman


If
you’re in your mid-thirties and work in the IT industry you probably grew up
using home computers such as the

Sinclair Spectrum
, Commodore-64, Acorn Atom and Atari 800. If this sounds
like you, you’ll probably be interested in a new book that I got hold of
recently entitled

"Digital Retro"
by Gordon Laing. The author writes the monthly "Retro"
article in Personal Computer World and it’s a coffee-table style book that looks
at 44 classic computers from the 70’s and 80’s.

Each computer has a two or four-page spread that gives the specification for
each machine, a number of glossy photos and a bit of history around the company
and the computer itself. In the past, I’ve owned an Atari 400,
Vic-20,
BBC Model B, Commodore Amiga, Mattel Intellivision,
Oric-1 and a
Commodore-64 (most of which are still in boxes in the loft) but it’s the
articles about some of the lesser known models, such as the
Amstrad
CPC-64
,

Tatung Einstein
,
Texas
TI99/4a
, Mattel
Aquarius
, Jupiter ACE and the
Sinclair QL that make the
book particularly interesting.

Amstrad CPC-464

A couple of interesting snippets from the book : Linus Torvalds originally
learnt to program on the Sinclair QL, who learnt to program in assembler using
the QL’s Motorola 6800 processor; The
Jupiter ACE was a ZX81

lookalike
designed and built by several of the original Sinclair team, but
used FORTH instead of BASIC as it’s programming language; and the RISC chipset
originally designed for the Acorn Archimedes is the direct descendent of the
StrongARM chips used in most of today’s mobile phones and PDAs.

Apple II

What made these old machines interesting is that backward
compatibility was never really an issue, and each company was free to innovate
and add features however it liked, leading to a situation where, over a period
of five years from 1980 to 1985, the amount of innovation within the home PC
market was phenomenal and with most machines costing less that 400. Take for
example Sinclair, which in 1980 launched the ZX80, the first sub- 100 computer
in the UK, followed by the ZX81 one year later, the colour ZX Spectrum a year
later on, and the Sinclair QL later in 1984. Within four years, you’d gone from
a barely functional Z80-based black and white computer with 1K of RAM and no
floating point calculations,, to a 16-bit home/office computer using the same
processor family as the Mac, it’s own office productivity suite, and the famous
Microdrive tape drives. Although it’s great now that you can buy any PC and
it’ll run any PC software, somewhere along the line the innovation’s gone and a
PC now isn’t all that different to the original PC built back in 1981.

IBM PC

The book’s by no means a comprehensive history, but it’s an
interesting diversion down memory lane for anyone who still fondly looks back at
loading programs using a cassette player and typing in program listings in
Computer & Video Games. On the same subject, if you’re interested in the story
behind the Acorn Atom, BBC Micro and the "Elite" game, I’d also recommend
Francis Spufford’s

"Backroom Boys - The Secret Return Of The British Boffin"
, which covers this
story off as well as the the backroom boys behind Concorde, Vodafone, Beagle 2
and the Black Night rocket launcher.

Comments

  1. Mr. Ed Says:

    I think there’s been quite a lot of innovation in the PC market since 1981. The mouse, Windows, multitasking, CD-ROM–all pretty innovative, at least for PC’s.
    I owned a TI-99/4A. Nothing like loading a program from cassette tape!

  2. Janus Christensen Says:

    You might be interested in this website: http://www.old-computers.com/
    They have details of over 600 systems, dating as far back as 1951.