That’s better than around here. I looked it up, and until 2008 it was required by law that there be at least one phone box per 5000 inhabitants (which, at the time, would have meant a minimum of about 3200 phone boxes nation-wide), and it was generally a fair number more. The village I live in, for example, with about 1500 people 30 years ago, had at least a dozen distributed over three or four locations.I don't know how it is where you are, but the number of public telephones in the UK has dropped drastically. Of the six that I remember locally, I believe that there's only one now.
A long time ago already (pre-smartphone, I think), I was watching Have I Got News For You on which Paul Merton commented that he didn’t have a mobile phone. “Why not?” he was asked. Because, he said (and I paraphrase), if you need one, there’s always someone nearby anyway that you can borrow one fromto get a taxi, you have to have a mobile.............
I had a BBC Model BI have an old outdated HP PC on my desk, however over the past couple of years I have moved my whole tech across to Apple, so now my iMac M1 24" talks to my iPhone, iPad and MacBook Air via the cloud.
I think you might say, I love tech :smiling3:
I started using computers with a ZX Spectrum back in the 80's.
I had a BBC Model B
They had an OS in order to work but not in the same way as Windows and the like with desktop icons. So when you turned it on you were just met with a blinking cursor..... You then either entered the code for whatever program you wanted to create or loaded them in from cassette tape or large floppy disks (very expensive). The BBC published a series of magazines on a monthly basis that taught you how to programme alongside their accompanying TV programme.I never had the opportunity to use a BBC, A or B, did they have an operating system or was it all code?
Thanks Andrew, I remember the black screen with the flashing green cursor as well.They had an OS in order to work but not in the same way as Windows and the like with desktop icons. So when you turned it on you were just met with a blinking cursor..... You then either entered the code for whatever program you wanted to create or loaded them in from cassette tape or large floppy disks (very expensive). The BBC published a series of magazines on a monthly basis that taught you how to programme alongside their accompanying TV programme.
Dave.... Apologies for the slight tangent.
That’s what he meantThey had an OS in order to work but not in the same way as Windows and the like with desktop icons. So when you turned it on you were just met with a blinking cursor.....
Whilst it is understandable how much the price of IT kit has come down, I do still find it amazing at what is now possible.Not at all - I had a Spectrum 48K+ - which had a proper full sized keyboard, and I had a Microdrive with it!
Must have bought it in the Mid 80s - I seem to think it was around £200 - not cheap, but that was my intro to computers. To think, I bought a 400Gb Windows 10 machine as backup last year for £75!
Dave
I agree Andrew it is quite mind boggling what IT is capable of now.Whilst it is understandable how much the price of IT kit has come down, I do still find it amazing at what is now possible.
Whilst it is understandable how much the price of IT kit has come down, I do still find it amazing at what is now possible.
Indeed...i was luck enough to get one for Christmas when I was 12.BBC B was £399 when it came out. Any operating system as such was contained in ROM, which loaded on turnon. It had its own BASIC, Assembly Language and "Machine Code", which the bigger programs used. Quite amazing what it could do with 32k RAM (and the Speccy with 48k).
AAhhh the Microdrive! When it worked, it was brilliant, but reliability was not a strong point! The Sinclair needed an expansion/extenson module to run them AND it had a joystick socket!!My first computer...
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got it second hand in the very early '80s from a friend who could afford a new C64 :money-face:.
Lot's of fun with "Tornado"(but just after having fought against a C60 cassette to upload the SW :cold-sweat
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Andrea
LOAD command, saying “We can go do something else while we wait.” The look on his face when the game was running almost instantly was priceless scalemodelling.co.uk is a privately operated online discussion forum. All content posted by members reflects their own views and opinions and does not necessarily represent those of the forum owners or administrators. While reasonable efforts are made to moderate content, no responsibility is accepted for user-generated material. By using this site, you agree to comply with UK law and the forum rules.