![]() The latest of which comes in the form of two boxes full of ZX Spectrum games (yes, I've actually got to some content for this blog :roll: ). These machines didn't hope to compare themselves to the wondrous marvels & heady heights of other hopefuls, but merely to be cheap & open up the market to the masses instead of the few.Īs a benefit of my brother's lack of children, I am the occasional recipient of a hand-me-down (being the younger of two). ![]() These wonders of circuitry date back to the early 1980s, buoyed on by the success of the home-kits of, and, Sir Clive Sinclair and his merry crew took cheap components and formed a little computer with but 16 kilobytes of memory (and optionally 48 kilobytes) and named it ZX Spectrum - retaining the ZX so as not to be too distant from its nearest cousins, all Zilog Z80s in some form or other, after all. In my capacity as gamer and with particular emphasis on being the Sinclair ZX Spectrum referee, it has been my pleasure to collect, dissect & rebuild the occasional Sinclair ZX Spectrum as well as collect the odd game for the machine.
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