Join
Michael John Nurney on a trip down memory lane, looking at the highs and lows of the
UK computer scene. With giants like Atari, Commodore, and Texas
Instruments taking on our tiny British companies. Could Sinclair and
Acorn take on the American muscle of Commodore? Well, for a considerable
amount of time, they did, but why did the multi-million-selling
Spectrum disappear? Why did the government-endorsed BBC Microcomputer
fail to sell into most UK homes?
Why did the
Acorn Electron fail? Given the might of Commodore and Atari, did the
Dragon 32 or Oric Atmos ever stand a chance? With millions of pounds on
the line, can they even survive the year? Late releases, missed
deadlines, and financial disasters all await our fledgling companies.
Can the strange 8/16-bit hybrid Ti99/4 beat the Commodore VIC-20? Is the
Oric 1 better than a Spectrum 48k? We look at a year-by-year history of
the 1980s and the computers and companies selling here in the UK.
What
happened to the global dominance of UK computers... Amstrad managed to
capture some of the European markets, along with Sinclair and Acorn.
Ultimately, Commodore International would dominate the home computer
scene, while Atari would briefly control the console market until the
Japanese arrived, but what happened to MGT, Tangerine, Lynx, and Dragon
Data? What became of Amstrad or the Enterprise64? The UK home computer
(8-bit) scene is covered from 1980 until 1988.
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363-pages