im sorry, but you Brits are so bloody cringy at times, esp these classic tech reports.
@hand58720 күн бұрын
He booked his flight on the internet, in 1982! Amazing!
@raresaturn25 күн бұрын
22:28 Doctor Who incidental music
@raresaturn27 күн бұрын
"It's IN the computer???" - Zoolander
@Opel_GuyАй бұрын
Incase anyone wondering what computer program was broadcast at the end was then I'll think you will be disappointed 😊. It was just a message about the forthcoming live programme and how to submit a question, asking if you would be happy to be called on the phone (presumably to ask your question live on air) or would like to be in the audience. I loaded this into my original 40 year old BBC B computer I had back in the day.
@andymerrettАй бұрын
Wow that's a big cottage!
@andymerrettАй бұрын
"Limited by your own imagination". Hmmm, not quite.
@andymerrettАй бұрын
Ian Trackman always reminds me of Malvin in Wargames!
@andymerrettАй бұрын
22:22 Hitler!!!!
@andymerrettАй бұрын
Since when did the BBC Micro have a screen resolution of 1200 x 1000!
@navalenigmaКүн бұрын
It was a virtual resolution so you're code would work no matter what screen mode you were using. The OS would map your native resolution to the virtual one. In reality the highest was around 640 x 480.
@andymerrettАй бұрын
You really wonder if Post Office/BT was paying Mac to keep banging on about Prestel. Did he really think the office of the future was still going to be using Prestel? That no other companies would come up with their own rival services? As a kid I remember getting a bit fed up with the amount they fawned over it - that and the bloody BBC Micro.
@andymerrettАй бұрын
I love Mac's view of the office of the future, but only a tiny bit in the future, of just having terminals connected to the mainframe. Even though PCs had just come onto the market he didn't seem to think that everyone would have their own powerful computer on their own desk.
@andymerrettАй бұрын
That Prestel adapter for the German system isn't translating some characters properly, shown fractions instead of the correct characters :)
@andymerrettАй бұрын
I love Mac's dismissive nature that America can't be doing anything about computers in education. Absolutely no self-awareness that he may just have not put in very good keywords.
@andymerrettАй бұрын
If the computer doesn't know anything about tic-tac-toe, why does it stop when Chris wins?
@andymerrettАй бұрын
RIP Ian Trackman.
@andymerrettАй бұрын
The irony now is that you'd need thousands of CRAYs to match even a single modern smartphone, tablet or laptop/desktop computer. Incredible power we have now and the kids most likely don't even realise.
@jimsimpson1006Ай бұрын
I love watching these old computer programmes. RIP Ian McNaught-Davis, a great presenter and very smart guy. BTW they are available in somewhat better quality on the BBC computer literacy project website.
@PE4Doers2 ай бұрын
Gill Nevill, should you be watching these comments in 2024, please let me know if you are available, and if we can hook-up in either the UK or the New York region of the US. 😍
@PE4Doers2 ай бұрын
I have a serious case of the 'hots' for Miss Gill Nevill. I wonder if she ever looks at theses comments.
what they really showed at the start, was just how far computer animation had improved in the 2-3 years since the Tron animations were made.
@thesteelrodent17962 ай бұрын
9:09 taken from Close Encounter of the Third Kind, 1977
@thesteelrodent17962 ай бұрын
8:00 MIDI interface before the MIDI standard
@thesteelrodent17962 ай бұрын
unfortunately for the knitting ladies, only a few years after this show was made, the fad of the knitting machine was over and by the end of the 80s they were all but forgotten. Hope they came out on top, because it's quite common for startups that are built on a fad to end up with massive debt
@thesteelrodent17962 ай бұрын
one thing about this show, and the Computer Programme before it, is that they often talk about databases, but they never really tell you what a database is. Of course, what they show is really the simplest form of database with a single table of data, which already pushed the limits of what you could do with early 80s micro-computers
@andymerrettАй бұрын
Did you not watch this episode? He's literally describing, in layman's terms, what a database is!
@thesteelrodent17962 ай бұрын
5 MP images in 1983? That wasn't really possible on anything but the insanely expensive systems made for TV. As for his memory model - Commodore, Atari, and many others kept the Basic interpreter and the character sets in ROM to not waste the precious RAM, and you only ever had to copy those bits to RAM if you wanted to modify it. Since the processors back then were so incredibly slow, it really didn't make any noticeable difference whether it was stored one way or another, but the tiny amount of available RAM was also why the game and program cartridges often included their own RAM in order to have enough to actually function as intended "Machine code", aka assembler, is really not that difficult to learn - and once you know assembler it's much easier to learn the bigger languages like Fortran, C, and Pascal, since it follows the same structure, where learning Basic can actually be a hindrance for learning other languages properly because it uses very different syntax. The hard part about assembler is that it has to be written specifically for the system it has to run on and you've got no variable names, so you need to know exactly where in memory everything is stored, which in turns means you need to know exactly how the machine organizes and addresses memory, since every time you want to do anything you have to specify specific memory addresses. This is the part that makes assembler difficult to use, which is also why nowadays it's only really used for the OS loader and the lowest part of the OS kernel, because writing full programs in assembler for systems with several GB of memory is extremely challenging
@thesteelrodent17962 ай бұрын
apart from Basic being effectively a dead language in any form other than VBA, much of what he said about proper programming practice still applies. Only thing he left out is "comment your damn code!". It's the absolute worst taking over from someone else, when none of the code is commented, and their way of doing things is different from how you'd do it - which is especially true for old programs - and then have to try to make sense of it
@thesteelrodent17962 ай бұрын
10:50 if it's an accident, no one's to blame. In a crash, however, there's always one or more people who have screwed up
@UNIX322 ай бұрын
22:47 - I love the performance on that AlphaSyntauri!
@comacuma28692 ай бұрын
U re really the much more corrupt 4 a real wise english man
@comacuma28692 ай бұрын
Ouww boyyyy clevveerrr
@comacuma28692 ай бұрын
The sub programmer,,shine laaight on dhaug,,you
@comacuma28692 ай бұрын
The sub
@comacuma28692 ай бұрын
Dhaug
@comacuma28692 ай бұрын
Unfriendly or in fact made faulty logic of commands ,complexxx ,,,,it would take a twisted head hindered health commander 2 get ahead
@comacuma28692 ай бұрын
Hmmmm faece
@comacuma28692 ай бұрын
Dhaug
@comacuma28692 ай бұрын
Hmmmmmmm ideaa started from typing machine ,,ended in the nasties gaming n computing buggfull micro system world has memory of,,, 2 much code in,with discipline,,,yet not much and ,not good outcome
@jimsimpson10062 ай бұрын
I love watching these old programmes, partly out of interest and partly pure nostalgia. Thanks for preserving and uploading them. In my opinion, it has to be one of the best uses of KZbin.
@edetmmekut8092 ай бұрын
Same here i think am weird
@rafiqadarr6217Ай бұрын
I also love these old programmes and collect 1980s computer books, for nostalgia.
@haroldfarthington74923 ай бұрын
Anyone know what ever happened to Phyllis?
@deeremeyer17493 ай бұрын
This is such utter horseshit.
@deeremeyer17493 ай бұрын
Paper airplanes have "aerodynamics"? Really? ROFLMAO. Not hardly.
@deeremeyer17493 ай бұрын
Half the "content" of this "educational television" series has nothing to do with the subject matter.
@andymerrettАй бұрын
They were aiming it at a very common demographic, those who knew absolutely nothing about computers whatsoever. Maybe a lot of it seems like filler but they are quite useful examples to show the basic concepts of logic and programming.
@deeremeyer17493 ай бұрын
20 pound doors hammered into place. And an utter caconophy of random background noise. British "industry" at its finest right there.
@deeremeyer17493 ай бұрын
Stonehenge was used to "forecast the approach of spring and winter". ROFLMAO. Yeah. Because it doesn't mean spring is approaching when trees start budding leaves and winter is approaching when trees lose their leaves.
@ninjacat2302 ай бұрын
It's nice to have more advance warning than that. it can be too late by that time, depending on what you're trying to grow.
@nickk65183 ай бұрын
It's all a bit rubbish if you can't get TikTok on Prestel, say the kids of today!!