Some good local news for some pioneering 8-bit old tech reborn anew:
Remodelled ZX Spectrum production set to begin
Production is set to start on a remodelled version of the ZX Spectrum, which will come pre-installed with 1,000 classic game titles.
Nottinghamshire firm SMS Electronics will manufacture the Sinclair Spectrum Vega at its Beeston factory. The machine, which has been developed by Luton-based Retro Computers, is due to go on sale in April.
Sir Clive Sinclair, who launched the original ZX Spectrum computer in 1982, is backing the venture.
Mark Goldby, managing director of SMS Electronics, said he was hoping for “big things” from the new machine…
ZX Spectrum computers from the 1980s to be made again in Beeston
… Five million of the original ZX Spectrum, first manufactured by Sinclair Computers in 1982, were sold.
SMS Electronics Ltd, based in Technology Drive, has now been chosen out of 20 manufacturers to reproduce the console…
… The new device will be called the Sinclair Spectrum Vega and will have the same look and feel as the original. More than 1,000 classic games will be pre-installed and the console is expected to sell for less than £100…
Retro frenzy builds as Beeston firm is chosen for ZX Spectrum revival
… “I remember the Hobbit game,” said the teacher for the Open University, whose love of technology inspired her to name her three-year-old daughter Ada after pioneering computer programmer Ada Lovelace.
Mrs Snarey, married to IT worker Fin, 35, said she was proud that Beeston had been chosen to help re-ignite the retro gaming industry.said: ‘‘Beeston is a lovely community and I think this move fits in with the quirkiness of the town. I like the idea that Beeston is going to be a bit of a technology hub.”…
And just for fun from the days of such a diminutive machine:
Coder creates smallest chess game for computers
A French coder has developed what is thought to be the smallest-sized chess computer program.
BootChess is only 487 bytes in size, and the code can be run on Windows, Mac OS X and Linux computers.
That makes it smaller than 1K ZX Chess – a Sinclair ZX81 computer game, which contained 672 bytes of code and had held the record for 33 years…
Hasn’t Beeston’s Technology Drive always been the gateway to a pretty big “technology hub”?…
And I wonder how many old ZX-80/81/Spectrum machines are lost in various attics/lofts?… Do people still hack assembler?!
Or all a game of MAME-on? 😛
Happy hacking!
Martin
(NB: “Hacking” here is used in the traditional sense for ‘making something work’…)
I wonder if you’ll find an old original Spectrum and the new Vega in the new ‘Cathedral of video games’ opening here Sat 28/03/2015:
National Videogame Arcade opens in Nottingham
See: GameCity and The National Videogame Arcade – The Story So Far
Game on! 🙂
Retro redeveloped and re-forked?… The story continues:
Sir Clive Sinclair in tech tin-rattle triumph … ZX Spectrum Vega+ console
Quite a blast from the past re-imagined!
Game on!!! 🙂
A few years(!) later, and multiple twists and turns, before a small few of the Vega+ finally appear:
ZX Spectrum Vega+ blows a FUSE: It runs open-source emulator
Here’s hoping they can yet up their game…
For a somewhat more impressive and hopeful revival, here’s a good article on the improving fortunes of the eastern Scotland city that made the ZX Spectrum – about five million of ’em! (Jump to “Generation ZX” to jump past the sad part of history…)
The city with grand designs
Good that games development and web design continue in that area.
Here’s hoping there is indeed now new energy and motivation for greater things!
Unfortunately, this particular ZX Spectrum reboot didn’t go so well:
Court orders moribund ZX Spectrum reboot firm’s directors to stump up £38k legal costs bill
As always in the legal games, the only people to win are those that are getting paid to argue. Also, hopefully the RCL silliness doesn’t spoil the successes of other ZX Spectrum groups.
Elsewhere for a completely different group, here’s hoping for great success for the ZX Spectrum Next 🙂
The End Game for Retro Computers Ltd?
The Register reports:
Is this a wind-up? Planet Computers boss calls time on ZX Spectrum reboot firm
A final End of Line?
And into the End Game… The Register reports:
ZX Spectrum Vega+ ‘backer’? Nope, you’re now a creditor – and should probably act fast
For anyone bought into that, make your move now! And good luck?
Here, The Register reports on possibly a one-of-a-kind original ZX Spectrum prototype, freshly time-warped from the 1980’s:
The first ZX Spectrum prototype laid bare…
Looks like The Saints of Silicon at the Centre for Computing History is a good target to visit!… 😉
… And they have uploaded and released the contents of The ROM:
ZX Spectrum prototype ROM is now available for download courtesy of boffins at the UK’s Centre for Computing History
Enjoy some very nostalgic bits and bytes! 🙂