Re: SINCLAIR QL's 25th birthday



PS there is no 4 as it was lost during the manufacturing process.
Brian

--
Brian Gaff....Note, this account does not accept Bcc: email.
graphics are great, but the blind can't hear them
Email: briang1@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
______________________________________________________________________________________________________________


"Brian Gaff" <Briang1@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:ZuEal.18969$Sp5.5439@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
I think several things annoyed me about the Ql.
First, a Quantum is the smallest non divisible part of the universe, so
the image of Clive jumping a long way was completely at the wrong end of
the Spectrum (pun intended)
2, The guy behind the QL from the press point of view was an ex BBC micro
man spit spit..
3 It was launched with half the Rom hanging out the back of the machine.
5, Despite the accepted wisdom that disc drives were going to come down in
price and were faster and more reliable than Microdrives, it still used
them.
Brian

--
Brian Gaff....Note, this account does not accept Bcc: email.
graphics are great, but the blind can't hear them
Email: briang1@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
______________________________________________________________________________________________________________


"Urs Koenig" <SinclairQL25@xxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:496ae505$1_7@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
On January 12th 1984 Sir Clive Sinclair presented the Sinclair QL
Professional Computer in a Hollywood-style launch event at the
Intercontinental Hotel, Hyde Park Corner, London. This was exactly
12 days earlier than Steve Jobs presented the Apple Macintosh.

Today, 25 years later we congratulate and celebrate the 25th birthday
of the Sinclair QL!
http://www.qlvsjaguar.homepage.bluewin.ch/SinclairQL_25th_anniversary_1984_to_2009.html

The QL still is a very good example of an innovative, stylish, powerful
and underestimated product. On one hand it failed in the market in the
long run but on the other it influenced many developments which ended in
today's products. At least in seven aspects the QL was a real Quantum
Leap:

1. First 32bit micro for both home and office use (Motorola MC68K CPU).
2. First PC with preemptive multitasking operating system with linear
addressing, Windows and Mac OS offered those important features only
years to decades later. The QL could run hundreds of jobs in parallel.
3. First PC with bundled Office suite (PSION XCHANGE offering word
processing, spread***, business graphics and database).
4. First PC with a highly integrated two chip North-/Southbridge, IBM
and Apple still used dozens of standard chips.
5. Innovative and timeless industrial design (case, motherboard and
keyboard), Sony's Playstation 2 or some later Apple designs look
very similar.
6. Innovative SuperBASIC Programming Language for Rapid Application
Development (RAD), years later Microsoft's Visual Basic closed the gap.
7. Even only around 150'000 QL's were sold, one user became very
important to the industry. Linus Torvralds used and programmed a
QL before he created what became Linux.

http://groups.google.com/group/comp.os.misc/browse_thread/thread/ebc0ad379434cb7c?q=linus+torvalds+ql

Check out this 25th anniversary presentation.
http://www.cowo.ch/downloads/SinclairQLis25-compressed.ppt

Try QPC, a virtual QL:
http://www.cowo.ch/downloads/QPC_a_virtual_QL.zip

Happy 25th anniversary and QL forever!

Urs König (aka cowo)
http://www.qlvsjaguar.homepage.bluewin.ch/






.