![]() Video output is through an RF modulator and was designed for use with contemporary television sets, for a simple colour graphic display. ![]() ![]() Hardware design was by Richard Altwasser of Sinclair Research, and the outward appearance was designed by Sinclair's industrial designer Rick Dickinson. The original model has 16 KB (16×1024 bytes) of ROM and either 16 KB or 48 KB of RAM. The Spectrum is based on a Zilog Z80 A CPU running at 3.5 MHz (or NEC D780C-1 clone). ZX Spectrum 48K motherboard (Issue 3B - 1983, heat sink removed) While the machine was officially discontinued in 1992, new software titles continue to be released - over 40 so far in 2018. The Commodore 64, Dragon 32, Oric-1, Oric Atmos, BBC Micro and later the Amstrad CPC range were rivals to the Spectrum in the UK market during the early 1980s. Licensing deals and clones followed, and earned Clive Sinclair a knighthood for "services to British industry". Some credit it as the machine which launched the UK IT industry. The introduction of the ZX Spectrum led to a boom in companies producing software and hardware for the machine, the effects of which are still seen. The Spectrum was among the first mainstream-audience home computers in the UK, similar in significance to the Commodore 64 in the USA. The Spectrum was released as eight different models, ranging from the entry level with 16 KB RAM released in 1982 to the ZX Spectrum +3 with 128 KB RAM and built in floppy disk drive in 1987 together they sold over 5 million units worldwide (not counting clones). Referred to during development as the ZX81 Colour and ZX82, it was launched as the ZX Spectrum by Sinclair to highlight the machine's colour display, compared with the black and white of its predecessor, the ZX81. ![]() The ZX Spectrum ( UK / z ɛ d ɛ k s ˈ s p ɛ k t r ə m /) is an 8-bit personal home computer released in the United Kingdom in 1982 by Sinclair Research. United Kingdom: 23 April 1982 40 years ago ( )Ĭassette tape, 3-inch floppy disk on Spectrum +3 ![]()
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