It is with sadness that we note the passing of the British writer, engineer, home computer pioneer, and entrepreneur, Sir Clive Sinclair, who died this morning at the age of 81 after a long illness. He is perhaps best known among Hackaday readers for his ZX series of home computers from the 1980s, but over a lifetime in the technology industry there are few corners of consumer electronics that he did not touch in some way.

  • GadgeteerZA
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    33 years ago

    RIP Sir Clive. Yes my ZX81 was the first proper computer I Had with it’s 1K of memory, and that was how I learnt to program.

    • @ericbuijs@lemmy.mlOP
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      23 years ago

      Back in the early '80s I was still in high school and had absolutely no money for a home computer (that’s how we called them) but I had money to buy computer magazines. So almost frantically I read articles about Sir Clive Sinclair and his inventions, ZX80, ZX81 and ZXSpectrum, imagining what I could do with one. I actually never bought a ZX (but years later a COMX-35 instead) but Sir Clive was the one who got me interested in computers in the first place.

      • GadgeteerZA
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        23 years ago

        Yes he really brought ‘real’ computers to so many homes. That kit approach was also what made it so cost-effective. Being forced to actually type in all the BASIC code, helped me understand how programming worked. It actually helped kick-start so many careers, and got computing on the map for the masses. I did manage to rescue a ZX Spectrum from someone who had no idea of what it really was. I only had the ZX81, so must still get around to actually firing up that ZX Spectrum (while I still have a TV with a tuner on it).

        • @ericbuijs@lemmy.mlOP
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          23 years ago

          BASIC was really basic (and slow) at that time. So I remember programming hexadecimal to speed things up. A real pain keeping me up night after night. Good times ;-)

  • @N0b3d@lemmy.ml
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    23 years ago

    I started in software development because of his ZX 81. So I blame him for all my misery!

    (J/k! RIP, Sir Clive. You were a visionary. Kind of wacky, mind you!)