Another great video, but you go make me feel old! I remember writing programs for the Sinclair Programs magazine a lot of years ago. How computing has changed.
@IgnoreMyChan7 ай бұрын
Hate to break it to you... You are not the youngest anymore, haha. But still young in mind!
@EgoShredder7 ай бұрын
I loved that magazine and I even typed one of the ZX81 games into a reply here the other week on another of Kari's videos. Many of those issues I still vividly remember, after revisiting them the other night. They kinda remind me of Sinclair User but aimed more at young kids starting out, as I was in the early 80s. My first experience was with the NASCOM if you remember that home soldered computer kit. Things got a whole lot easier once the ZX Spectrum hit the scene.
@ewasteredux7 ай бұрын
It is always interesting to see the younger generation consider the tech from the 80's worth exploring. She did a great job in the video and I certainly think that deserves kudos. If you make more, I'll watch. And of course I will continue to tune in to @ExplainingComputers as always.
@rajveer_20097 ай бұрын
*do
@TuxedoPanther7 ай бұрын
I started with the Vic 20 in the 80s, it had 3.5K of RAM, it didn't stop people making excellent games for it, including chess, that was also hard to beat. I'm now a C++ software engineer, I have made a career out of programming 👍
@neilbradley7 ай бұрын
Kari, I'm a 54 year old software/hardware engineer that grew up in the 80s with those exact magazines and computers. You might not realize it, but you doing this will put you light years ahead of most people in the computer industry because you're literally looking at where computers have come from. If you have that background, you'll much MUCH better decisions as a designer. You're on the right track - keep up the GREAT work! You're going places! If you haven't already, check into the Big Five games for the TRS-80, like Robot Attack, Meteor Mission II, Defense Command, etc....
@manyifnotmost7 ай бұрын
50, and I’m about to play this to my seven year old: “This is how dad did computers a few…errr…a while back!” Absolutely top content.
@juhajuntunen78667 ай бұрын
I agree even I play Commodore league back then.
@lubricatedgoat7 ай бұрын
Agreed. 55. Taught myself 6502 and wrote games without an assembler! (VIC/64) It changes the way you think. It also goes hand in hand with digital electronics.
@ironhell8137 ай бұрын
I did this when I was in middle school. But it was already deprecated. Bought a Tandy color comp from amity and my library had ass old books in it for the comp lol
@occamraiser7 ай бұрын
I have a few years on you - I was doing my computer science degree at about this time. We learned how things worked, not just how to be a OOD/C++ software engineer, like today. I feel privileged to have had the education I had.
@phykman7 ай бұрын
The hours I spent copying code from a book, trying to debug it, then the excitement when it actually worked.
@eng3d7 ай бұрын
then later hacking it
@bulliecasa87227 ай бұрын
The worst were the ones that made you type in huge arrays of hex digits so it could run parts of the program in machine code. If you made a mistake and typed an 'F8' instead of an 'FB' the program was likely to crash and you would lose everything unless you had remembered to save to tape.
@John_Locke_1087 ай бұрын
Did it for fun as a kid and now I get paid to do it.
@jbaidley7 ай бұрын
I remember getting the error message "TYPE MISMATCH AT LINE 80", so I typed "MISMATCH" into line 80 and it still didn't work! Reader, I rage quit.
@leejeary17 ай бұрын
I remember doing one which was 4 pages long and got an error at the end.. the following month in the magazine they apologized as they printed a mistake so got it working in the end 😂
@thomaswinston51427 ай бұрын
I had a ZX81, VIC-20 then C64. I'm 55 now and still have most these books and others. They were great times. 😊
@molenz19607 ай бұрын
I had the acorn electron, c64 then Amiga. Those were the days.
@stephenfwadsworth95657 ай бұрын
I followed, the same path. Now 52. Although I had seen and used a few machines at fairs and school. The Zx81 was my neighbors. His parents, worked for the local Hardware store, which he now runs. I used to work there after school from 10 to 15. I came back and worked from them when I was 34. As the computer support person. (I also ended up being press ganged into analyzing, their internal systems). Self-taught and my peers were some of the best in the field back then in my country. I from there ran my own company, providing technical and development support. :) Always love to here the path traveled and hopes and ambitions for the future. I am off too teach ICT again at a Mental Health organisation, if all goes as planned in the next two weeks.
@neilloughran44377 ай бұрын
Same here... will be 56 this year and recall the listings from all the magazines and books in those days. I've been a software engineer, teacher, researcher and it all stems from that magic 1981-85 period.
@lucasrem6 ай бұрын
go why you all cry the same age here ?
@thomaswinston51426 ай бұрын
@@lucasrem Your comment makes no sense, you should delete it.
@jbaidley7 ай бұрын
Loved those books. The hilarious contrast between the art and the actual games was amazing.
@BriansManCave7 ай бұрын
Same tactics used on Atari 2600 boxes 😁
@JohnnyWednesday7 ай бұрын
Nothing hilarious about it - we didn't see bad graphics back then, we saw an aid to our imagination
@JustWasted3HoursHere7 ай бұрын
Yep! Like the artwork on Atari 2600 box versus what the actual game looked like. Luckily, Activision moved away from this practice and actually showed the game graphics on the back (as well as the name of the programmer which was the reason the founders of Activision left Atari in the first place: no recognition for their hard work).
@BriansManCave7 ай бұрын
@@JustWasted3HoursHere Yeah! I remember when I seen the box for Keystone Kapers... I knew I wanted the game based on the box alone 🙂
@JustWasted3HoursHere7 ай бұрын
@@JohnnyWednesdaySo true! It's all relative. I remember being blown away by Pitfall's graphics. So simple in comparison to graphics of today, but at the time it was amazing. Later, I realized the ACTUAL impressive thing about that game is how David Crane was able to squeeze over 200 unique screens into only 4K of ROM space. The way he did it is quite genius. Here he is talking about this very clever trick: kzbin.info/www/bejne/g3O3YoKBa7t0f7csi=aGV5h8O2Rpf_0Pdp&t=1332 (The whole lecture is quite interesting though).
@cholohd327 ай бұрын
51 year old dane here. Those was the good times. 2 whole tv channels on a black & white tv. Rotary phone rang once a week. The inner city bus only showed every 40 mins. People knew how to use typewriters. Then one day my dad brought home a ZX81. I remember thinking this was truly groundbreaking because up untill this point anything on a screen had been completely locked. Today we take it for granted, but back then, being able to type in something as simple as your own name & make it go "beep" made me think this would change the future. A couple of month later dad brought home a similar brand basic type-in games magazine. Spend 4 hours typeing it in, especially as you usually need to "convert" the basic code to be compatible with your type of machine. Didnt have a cassette recorder. So sunday afternoon a week later i typed it all in again, just to play some more. It was different times back then. Today people have a hissy fit if the bus is 2 mins late.
@0L17 ай бұрын
What's the word for feeling nostalgia for times you haven't lived? This is how I feel from reading your comment.
@thamessinclair20107 ай бұрын
"Then one day my dad brought home a ZX81. I remember thinking this was truly groundbreaking because up untill this point anything on a screen had been completely locked." Exactly the same happened to me. Same experience.
@oneeyedphotographer7 ай бұрын
My first programming languages were FORTRAN and COMPASS for a CDC 3200. Google "CDC 3200 Monash" for the sort of thing. Ours was up about the 12th floor of the tallest building in Perth..
@cholohd327 ай бұрын
@@0L1 "Pseudo-Nostalgia" perhaps? Sounds like a good 8-bit game title/plot though as it sounds silly enough to be one like "Rockstar ate my hamster", "Ninja Scooter Simulator", "How to be a complete bastard". :D
@valuemastery7 ай бұрын
My dad took me to an industry fair in germany when I was very young. Had my first encounter with a computer there. Had no idea what a computer was back then, those were brand new. There was a screen and a keyboard, and I said "look dad, you can type on a TV". I went there and entered my name, then pressed return. Some kind of interpreter must have interpreted it as a variable or command name, and it gave an error message "?bad name". I was shocked. One or two years later, our school got its first computer (a Commodore PET), where I started to learn programming in Basic, and later 6502 assembly.
@paulhammond85837 ай бұрын
I'm a 43 year old guy now, but this really takes me back. When I was 4 years old, my dad bought our family a Sinclair Spectrum (+2, 128k ram). Back then, games magazines had code in them just like this, and I remember the speccy manual itself had a BASIC hangman game you could type out. As a young kid I used to love typing out the code and seeing the games running. I'm a software engineer now, so it must have made quite the impact. It's awesome to see a young lady like you playing about with retro stuff like this. I wish my daughter would get as excited over this stuff as you do!
@darran3117 ай бұрын
I'm 43 too and my dad did the same I was about 4 too but he didn't like the keyboard to the point that after seeing my cousins c64 he saved up to get one of those instead
@gavconway87377 ай бұрын
47 here and the ZX 128k was my first computer. Freddie Hardest was amazing!
@R9CVG7 ай бұрын
Stuff you guys with your 128k, my first Speccy was when I was nine and it was a 16k. Best day of my childhood was when my mum surprised me with a ram pack so I could play 48k games!
@misterprecocious24917 ай бұрын
My first speccy was the 48+ but the keyboard was not as good as the original and then I got a 128+2 with the awful built in cassette deck which failed so many times, why didn't Amstrad fit a external mic in/out attachment, would have saved them alot of money on repairs.
@dylanherron39637 ай бұрын
I absolutely love the ending of your input, "I'm a software engineer now, so it must have made quite the impact" and that is EXACTLY what every one of those companies and medias were going for, to inspire you to take it further! (Okay, we can definitely argue about "every one" of those companies lmao)
@gryphonavocatio3 ай бұрын
We had some of these books in my school library back in the 90s. One of my great triumphs as a 12-year-old was getting Death Valley to run on GW-BASIC for old DOS computers. They were really great books since resources for kids who were interested in that sort of thing had really dried up after the 80s microcomputer boom.
@JohnnyWednesday7 ай бұрын
I'm a game engine developer and I started as a kid in the 80s with these systems - always a pleasure to see them again
@yakmage80857 ай бұрын
I’m a software engineer and same. Though I got my hands on them about 10 years after their prime it was still my introduction to programming. Its a shame we’ve moved so far away from educating people on how to program/use computers
@5minutemovies9777 ай бұрын
Which engine(s) are you/ have you worked on? If I may ask.
@spyrgelispyy7 ай бұрын
How did you become a game engine developer? I'm currently applying to college, and I'm interested in game engines (among other things) but not game dev itself. I would like to know if you can get such a job from a pure cs background.
@Ziflinz6 ай бұрын
@@spyrgelispyyDifferent game engine developer here, but to answer your question - I have a computer engineering degree. CS is also fine, but a bit more knowledge about hardware helps. I always put more focus on personal projects & research vs degrees when interviewing people. (I also grew up in the 80s and spent many hours with my dad's help entering in code for games on my C64 from Byte magazine.)
@reedjasonf7 ай бұрын
First time watcher. Not sure where your videos have been all my life but Im very glad to have stumbled on this corner of the Internet.
@johnnycash58587 ай бұрын
Kari I'm 43 and I actually had this book when I was a kid. Thanks for the blast of nostalgia and making old things new again with your videos.
@lucasrem6 ай бұрын
why you all cry the same age here ?
@tonybennett7145Ай бұрын
Nice to see someone taking an interest in retro computing and also trying to get others interested but doing it in such a fun and intuitive way. Great stuff! Keep it going Kari.
@justinsheppherd18067 ай бұрын
This video gets you a subscribe. I remember typing pages of basic into my Speccy, way back in 1982, only for it to whinge about an error near the beginning. Those Usborne books were great too, though the ones about ghosts, monsters and UFO's were always the most popular and formative on young minds, and they've been reprinted relatively recently, too.
@ctrlaltrees7 ай бұрын
Can't believe this is only your second ever video - good stuff! Big fan of these Usborne books, they were a big part of my computer education 😁
@The_BenboBaggins7 ай бұрын
Not sure why you appeared on my feed, but I'm glad you did - I like how relaxed and natural your presentation is. Loved a bit of basic coding back in the day on our Amstrad CPC464 (I think that's what it was called)
@StuartFischer5 ай бұрын
Very nostalgic. Love the artwork in these. Bought some of these from our school’s book sales & typed them into our old Apple II back in the mid to late 80s.
@LumpyMoose7 ай бұрын
I learnt coding in the 80’s from the amazing ‘input’ magazine.
@wisteela7 ай бұрын
I have the complete collection of those in folders. Bought from a car boot sale many years ago.
@JustWasted3HoursHere7 ай бұрын
Oh man, "input", "Compute!" and "Compute Gazette", "Info 64" (later just "info") and so many more. Type in games, reviews of games, upcoming software and hardware. Good times!
@mlachaise7 ай бұрын
Oh, man. There was a helicopter game in one of those magazines I'm still trying to find. You'd fly around in a chopper and shoot blocks to make your way out, a la "Breakout." To this day, I can't remember the name of the game or the magazine. Thanks for the reminder about "Input."
@ruialexandre61977 ай бұрын
Got mine. Still remember an article predicting the Internet and accessing the computer to find the bus schedule or buy movie tickets...
@Electronzap3 ай бұрын
I have clear containers with blue handles like the ones in the background but mine are bigger and the corners have structural reinforcement so you can stack a lot of them. Perfect way to store stuff.
@MistaGoodbytes7 ай бұрын
This brings back memories of spending hours typing out lines of Commodore BASIC on my C64 from computer magazines and then spending even more time trying to figure out where I'd made the error when the game wouldn't run 🤣
@teebodk39177 ай бұрын
Same here! And quite often the error wasn't made while typing, but was caused by an actually error as printed in the magazine. Of course you wouldn't know that until you'd spent literally hours meticulously going through everything. Then once your realized there was a typo in the mag, you'd have to wait a month for the next issue to come out, keeping fingers crossed that they'd figured it out and print a correction (and that the mag hadn't sold out or gone out of business). Quite a few games were never fixed, so the time was simply wasted. One such game I remember with particular dread was called "Grab des Pharaohs" (Tomb of the pharaoh) from the German magazine C64er (at least that's how I remember the name) - this game was in many, many, MANY parts, taking up tens of pages each issue, and the end result was supposed to be a game where you entered a pyramid on an exciting adventure... In reality, the listings were full of typos, so each month came with a few corrections, but in the end, it still didn't work properly and was never fixed! Oh, the days!
@peterkossits47947 ай бұрын
...and you would find that you had more fun debugging the code than actually playing the game. It was a game within a game.
@micahcowan7 ай бұрын
It's great to see someone of your generation making videos about these things! I do hope you'll do many more, perhaps on a variety of different computers of that era (assuming you have access).
@SteveGodrich7 ай бұрын
With no internet and needing to save a few weeks of pocket money to get any games, listings in books like this (and computer magazines of the time too) were great for getting new content back in the 1980s. In fact, it was from typing listing like this in, and changing stuff around to see what happened, that I learned how to code. Thanks for bringing back some great memories!
@CallofShame5 ай бұрын
I love these videos! Thankyou!!!
@anthonymoloney36717 ай бұрын
I'm old enough to have typed some of these programs into a Vic 20, back in the day. Really glad to see they aren't forgotten. Great video, thank you!
@larswillsen5 ай бұрын
Man, I used to code games back then (assembler) and sound tracks :)
@tom_1237 ай бұрын
Usborne books from this era were very special :)
@derekchristenson57115 ай бұрын
I have one of the Usborne books from back in the day, and I used other, similar books from the local public library to learn programming as a kid. They were already old, then (in the early 90's), but they were fun to work through. :-) Some of the computers they'd mention were unknown to me outside of these books, and only since the advent of KZbin have I finally seen some of them in action, including the ZX Spectrum (and earlier Sinclair machines), which were sold under the Timex brand here in the US but with only limited sales success. Nobody I knew owned anything other than an Apple II series 8-bit computer or IBM PC clone at the time. Other computers were just things I had seen in stores or mentioned in passing in computer books, despite the success many of them apparently had had just a few years earlier, when I was too young to notice such things.
@Raelworld7 ай бұрын
This is amazing to me! I'm 53, and I can genuinely say that me getting my Speccy when I was 11 defined the rest of my career. I used to know the keypresses by heart. So nice to see you using a real Spectrum.
@jipster20205 ай бұрын
52 years old here. I had a Dragon32 (later also a Speccy 48k), and my friend had a ZX81 (later also a Speccy 48k). We would spend hours and hours typing these games in from magazines. Half the time there was a typo in the magazine (because the code in the magazine was usually typed in by a secretary who knew nothing about programming) and the game wouldn't run, until we worked out where they messed up. As 12 year olds we felt like programming GODS when we managed to work out and fix the program so that it actually worked. It's been a long time since I saw that horrific rubbery keyboard on the Spectrum. The Dragon32 had a real keyboard, which was far less stressfull, but it didn't "autocorrect" like the Speccy. Thank you for make me feel old Kari ! ;)
@NeilFeltham6 ай бұрын
I'm a 54 year (feeling very) old analyst that started off on a ZX81, then ZX Spectrum. I'm now repairing and restoring these amazing vintage machines as well as playing some classic ZX81 Games (The Valley of Adventure) and Spectrum games (the likes of Atic Atac, 3D Ant Attack, The Hobbit) On the original hardware using the original tape recorders of the era that I've also restored. It's absolutely fantastic to see the younger generation programming on these machines. Thank you for creating this content and sharing.
@nickclarkukАй бұрын
I using exactly these books to program my spectrum 48k in the 80s . I found the keyboard a nightmare haha . Thank you for a trip down memory lane !
@ncf17 ай бұрын
wow.. that brings back memories. The excitement, the utter excitement of buying the book from the Book Club in school.. waiting weeks or months to finally get the book.. the anticipation after seeing the pictures! And the inevitable, *inevitable* incredible let down after seeing the final results on the screen! But we were back in the pioneering days, this was all new, always different, always exciting to see what comes next... do you know what its like to see photo-realistic imagery flying around the screen now in a game?! I still cant believe it.. decades have passed but in a flash. Games these days, indeed what can be done on a computer now, is simply incredible to me.
@neilloughran44377 ай бұрын
yeah same here. Book club! :D
@paul_boddie6 ай бұрын
Book club here, too! Scholastic was the company involved, I think.
@ncf16 ай бұрын
@@paul_boddie yes i think thats the one!
@fuzzblightyear1455 ай бұрын
in my 50's here. I remember getting that exact same book and spending hours typing them in and playing them on my speccie back in the day. (And then later started tweaking the code). My 10yr old self learnt so much. Massive nostalgia trip
@simonbutler-bq8yb7 ай бұрын
I did the graphics for most of the eight-bit versions of The Never Ending Story except the C64. Great video. As a pixel pusher, coding is dark magic to me.
@jonathancauldwell98226 ай бұрын
Coding is dark magic to us code monkeys too, especially in assembly language
@joeblow229Ай бұрын
Great video! Thanks for the link to Usborne, can't wait to look through some of those to try on my C64 :)
@brianturner16927 ай бұрын
I still have one of these Usborne books, and a few other Spectrum ones, bought in the 80s and they have moved around with me. Good for a nostalgia trip still!
@COYBIG19677 ай бұрын
I was born in 83 and my first computer was the James Bond version of spectrum zx2 so thins brought back memories . Can’t believe I’ve never found this channel before . Your videos are really brilliant
@HexForger7 ай бұрын
When I was 12y old (1995) I bought a special edition of some gaming magazine that discussed programming games for x86 architecture (486DX2 instruction set) in TASM (Turbo ASM) and little did I realize back then this was NOT the easiest entry point into game programming (what a shocking revelation!). Funnily enough I'm back to square one as I again code in assembly (though "tad bit" more powerful MVS mainframe architecture). Those were days. Today my two kids learn visual coding by effortlessly moving blocks of code with layers upon layers of frameworks, and I'm just amazed how simple and accessible programming has become.
@Kadasoyio4 ай бұрын
Because we all remember how eye opening it felt when discovering for the first time "IF/THEN" in BASIC.
@Micromaximaa7 ай бұрын
Great Vid Kari! I recently discovered Usborne books after watching a vid by Matt Godbolt describing the fundamentals of machine code. It seems they nailed it way back then so still relevant today which is a big achievement.
@markbolden45405 ай бұрын
I love these videos!!!! Talk about taking me back!!
@CodingwithThanos7 ай бұрын
your setup looks amazing! And your concept and execution just phenomenal! I can't wait for more of your videos 🤩
@reptongeekАй бұрын
I had several of these books. I actually typed in every program in one book and saved them on tape. I even created a very very basic menu to choose the games
@Ornateluna7 ай бұрын
Amazing video, it's rather nice to see there are people more like me interested in retro computers.
@killianlomax82377 ай бұрын
The video was awesome already, but the choice of the outro tune was divine! Had an instant 80's flashback.
@Larry7 ай бұрын
I used to program out of these books on my infant school's BBC Micro in the '80s, I remember doing a horse betting game, and a top down racing game where you avoided the sides of a canyon and stars representing obstacles.
@wisteela7 ай бұрын
Was that last one Death Valley?
@Larry7 ай бұрын
@@wisteelaThat name rings a bell, yeah.
@tony92506Ай бұрын
LOL I used to do this with my Atari 800xl, love those magazines. How fun,! Luv your channel.
@taqyon7 ай бұрын
Back in my day for the C64 in the back of the mag there used to be a tonne of hex values that one would type in with error checking. It was so exciting to type it up and play it! Thanks for the interesting video! Keep up the good work!
@jaycee19807 ай бұрын
Same on the Spectrum.. machine code programs printed out as Hex values, and you would type the whole lot into a Basic program called a Hex loader, then save it to tape.. and hopefully it worked !
@markasiala63557 ай бұрын
My mom, recognizing a bargain, used to help me do the same. She would narrate the hex while I typed. Only person who I know whose mom would read him hexadecimal. 😂
@taqyon7 ай бұрын
@@markasiala6355 Haha! That's awesome. I was only allowed 45 minutes a day with my computer, after which I had to unplug it from the TV and put it in my room. I would wait until they think I am sleeping and then I would type the hex codes blind into the editor, using the movement of the tape drive to confirm entries xD
@davidboydarnott4175 ай бұрын
Hi Kari, it was lovely to see the ZX Spectrum again, I spent ages 12-14 playing Skool Daze, Hungry Horace,Ghost Rider and so many fun games on it. We used to break into the programs and just change the credits and try pass them off as our own games to girls.🙊😂😂 But I went on to become a CNC programmer for Lathes and Milling Machines in Engineering and lived a very luxurious life for a lot of years. I can easily see how you find electronics and programming exciting.Thanks for sharing! ❤️+✌️
@TheOnlyPommyman7 ай бұрын
I've still got my books and have them in my classroom. The kids are fascinated by them as it's almost alien to them.
@FunAfter527 ай бұрын
Wow! *New Sub* I turned 59 this year and I've been in a retro mood as of late. I was looking into retro coding and so forth. This is right up my alley. The first computer I ever worked on was a TRS-80. My first computer I bought was a Vic-20 followed by a Commodore 64. I just bought a Commodore 64 mini this month. I am putting together my own "school" curriculum and these look so much fun. Thanks for the video!
@CommanderAscorbius7 ай бұрын
Great video. If it wasn't for the Usborne books and my local library, I wouldn't have the career in software development I have today. I used to love those books, we always knew the end result wouldn't be as exciting as the art made it out to be, but it got us interested enough to keep us focussed enough to enter the listings and then alter them and understand what was happening. I'd like to see more of these if you're up for making more videos like this. Thank you for the memories :)
@sunburystudios82347 ай бұрын
What incredible content, whatever is going on with your mic also has this ASMR effect, the whole flipping through the book was amazing. All the best gadgets, I could watch this all day.
@MapedMod7 ай бұрын
This channel is going to blow up really soon. Here before 10k subs.
@stelleratorsuprise81855 ай бұрын
Artillery like games (shooting at each others with an mountain between you) are fun ...
@NumptyMcNumptyface7 ай бұрын
BASIC is what got me into programming and culminated in a -admittedly brief- career as a software engineer. It's a shame the language wasn't more standardised even though BASICode tried to remedy that somewhat successfully.
@Moonrakerd2 ай бұрын
some of these games used to live on programmable calculators :D this brings back memories
@H3adcrash7 ай бұрын
Those braids are sick! :D
@H3adcrash7 ай бұрын
@@karilawler lol, you're welcome!
@Jim-mn7yq7 ай бұрын
Thx. Got a real kick out of this. I too back in the day spent a lot of time entering code from mags into my machine and learning basic. Yes, please do another game.
@Retroguyuk757 ай бұрын
How did you get into retro tech Kari?
@Retroguyuk757 ай бұрын
@@karilawler fabulous 🤩. Then enjoy the journey as much as I do..🙏✌️☮️🕊️
@nitram_nosnibor7 ай бұрын
This is GREAT and KZbin knows what I love. I am so pleased to see someone of your age into this, I come from this era (loving the t-shirt too) and it brings back wonderful (and sometimes frustrated) memories of a wonderful pastime (plus you're a fellow Brit ha ha). Thank you I will be watching more of your vids, keep up the wonderful work.
@D88niel6 ай бұрын
Can you fix me?
@MatTheeDarkOverLordSimonsАй бұрын
I wasnt so quick at typing back in the day, I remember sitting down once a month with my mum (Who was a data inputter back in the day) with my copy of Computer Battlegames, and she would type out one game of my choice for me. I learnt a lot from the code, and started to self learn Basic.
@MatTheeDarkOverLordSimons6 сағат бұрын
Started with a Vic 20.
@mfoyle6 ай бұрын
We sometimes had these books in our local library! I used to seek them out and loved bringing them home after school. As you say, the illustrations and stories around the code listings were great fun and I too used to love just flicking through and reading the books!
@HarveyHirdHarmonics7 ай бұрын
I remember as a teenager, when these kinds of computers were popular, they had some of them running at the stores to try them out with the BASIC interpreter open. I used to quickly write a little number guessing game like in this video into every such computer I encountered. At home I had a Commodore 16 back then where I learned to program in BASIC.
@mausmalone7 ай бұрын
I came to a hard stop when I saw Computer Spacegames and Computer Battlegames in the thumbnail. I remember borrowing both of them multiple times from my local library when I was a kid. I more or less forgot they existed but once you showed the interiors all the memories came flooding back!
@SanguineNight7 ай бұрын
I have this amazing memory when I was 5 years old of my Nan looking after me one day, my Dad had got a commordore 64 sometime before this, my Nan brought round a programming magazine she had got from a bootfair just like the ones in this video. We had an amazing day programming in all sorts of games and saving them to the cassette. After watching this video it hit me right in the heart when I was about to ring her and see if she remembers which magazine it was but sadly she passed two years ago. Miss her everyday x
@PedroLopez-yo7nr6 ай бұрын
Thank you. This brought back memories. I use to play games on a Radio Shack TR80 back in high school. Thanks for the links to the books. Looking forward to reading through them.
@HalfassDIY7 ай бұрын
You brought back the memories of all those summer nights of 1981 with my Commodore PET and "101 Basic Computer Games" book ! Man those were great times !
@Steve-3P07 ай бұрын
Kari! You took me back to my youth. This is how I learned to code on my TI-99. I couldn't afford a floppy drive, so my mom rigged up a cassette player.
@joysticksnjukeboxes7 ай бұрын
What a nice video, thank you! I remember typing in programs from computer books back then but I don't think I ever saw any of these Usborne books until I heard about them in recent years. They're quite nice with all the artwork, etc.
@moopet80367 ай бұрын
I had these as a kid, and literally have all the ones you're showing in your bouquet of nostalgia on the shelf next to my desk, and one of them - the "battlegames" one - I just picked up from ebay yesterday. I have no idea why the algorithm showed me this video but I am now Extremely Excited about things.
@gigsim71157 ай бұрын
Love the studio, the camera angle! Your are a natural. More video !
@ashleyp.49327 ай бұрын
AHHH! So many memories - having a ZX Spectrum in the 1980s, spending a lot of time programming in basic (although never got really advanced), typing in programs from books and magazines and they finding they don't work... It was such a great time and this video does make me feel very nostalgic. After a while third-party producers brought out "proper" keyboards for the Spectrum, so although you still pressed one key to get the command, the keys themselves were plastic, the case was bigger and it was more like a full size keyboard. The keyboard was attached to the main chipboard by a couple of flat ribbon-style cables, so it was easy to swap for a different one. It made for much easier programming.
@BenColemanUK6 ай бұрын
I grew up loaning these books from the library and learning to program at home, and many *many* years later, I'm still writing code professionally as a software developer. I love how you found same joy as I did in the goofy illustrations and story they tried to weave around these simple programs. Honestly it brings a huge smile to my face seeing a new generation discover these books. Thank you!
@radcountrebel7 ай бұрын
These were my childhood and where the seeds of the rest of my life were planted! I started on these when I was around 6 or 7, on a ZX Spectrum with my Dad. Now I'm weeks off turning 40 and I've spent the past 20 years in the IT industry. 😂 Thank you so much for posting this video. I'm going to show it to my Dad and do some heavy-duty reminiscing with him 😂 Liked and subscribed. 👍
@logothaironsides29427 ай бұрын
I learned coding on the speccy! Its not long before you can just type away even with the key combinations. When my kids were growing up, we did quite a lot of coding starting with the speccy and those very same books. Many Schools in the 1980s used the spectrum as a class computer and did projects all around the curriculum using them. It was a real blast from the past watching you code and run one.
@SLAYERSARCH27 күн бұрын
hi i'm leo 41 and this takes me back to my old days when i opened up my zx manual or apple 2e :)
@tedmerrick9356 ай бұрын
You have brought us older folks back to our childhood. I love everone talking about the computers we started with back in the 80s.
@htwingnut7 ай бұрын
Nice! I submitted a number of programs like that back in the 80's and had many published. It was great fun at the time. Glad you showcased these!
@willembuiting7 ай бұрын
Hi Kari! I am 65 years old and I used to fill my evenings (and nights) typing in these codes from the magazines I bought. Great fun seeing someone your age doing this in 2024! Keep up the good work! Great fun!
@csaunders4z7 ай бұрын
Awesome video and a great trip down memory lane. I had a bunch of these books when I was a kid, and now I work in video games -- the system works! I got most of these books from my school book fair and had a blast trying to customize the games to my liking. While the programs today seem laughly short and simple, at the time (especially while learning basic) I remember some of them seeming daunting in their complexity! I also remember enjoying the little robot illustrations a great deal. Anyhow, great finds.
@fabled-pilgrim7 ай бұрын
This is insane. I remember borrowing that very book from the library in the 80s!! That Usborne series taught me BASIC. Those books must be like gold dust now. Thanks for sharing! 😊
@jasonbrown51527 ай бұрын
Loved these, not many worked on the c64, but the imagery and illustrations were fantastic and took me too another place. Thankyou.
@IanMorpeth7 ай бұрын
Back in the 80s I regularly bought the magazines to put the games listings in, spending hours and hours doing it. I’ve still got some of the old magazines, Your Computer and Computer and Video Games. The listings with embedded machine code were especially fun to do, endless lines of hex numbers put in manually - get one number wrong and it’s all over. What fun! There is a short video of a game called Vic Logger for the Vic-20 on KZbin. I remember everybody in the house playing it. Now it looks so basic but at the time it was completely riveting. I even got a couple of games published in magazines myself, basically knock offs of the old game and watch games. Keep up the good work!
@tineocedric7 ай бұрын
Loved your video and your energy. These types of books/games exactly show where I got stuck in the 80s... All I could find was books and magazines with this type of basic programms. And I was dying to learn how to do the graphical types of games with sprites and assembly, etc... and that was out of reach as the shops in my area didn't have some of the books that taught assembly, etc...
@TheLicewine7 ай бұрын
How cool is this. I started programming (copy written basic code) my dad's Sharp when I was 6 or so which taught me basic. I then moved up to a ZX81 and Spectrum thereafter coding in assembler. This is like a time machine...cheers, Chris
@ColdestMoon_Channel7 ай бұрын
Brilliant, this takes me way back. the fun and the pain was that ruddy keyboard on the Speccy, The hours lost looking for key words and the combination on how to access them... Im in my 40s and this was how I started my long career in IT. I made my ZX jump through hoops, talk to other computers via Packet Radio, and Bulletin boards.. Those were fun days!
@DLiberator787 ай бұрын
A fantastic video Kari, I am in my early 50s now and grew up with the ZX Spectrum as it was my first home computer, I still own the Usborne book collection and enjoyed programming from them when I was a kid. It is great to see young people such as yourself taking an interest in these historic computers and programming in BASIC. The other book Usborne Computer Battlegames was very good also. It would be interesting to you program the games in each book as those ones contain animated graphics to create simple games. Great content.
@robertmendez73767 ай бұрын
Subscribed! Growing up in the 80's was a blast
@ki4rex6 ай бұрын
I modified the code from a book similar to these to make my first "for me" games!!!! Thanks for the video and nostalgia.
@sparcie7 ай бұрын
I used to read these books as a child and I remember enjoying the colourful presentation and explanation of the code. I didn't have any of the machines listed on the cover, but I was able to convert a few to the machine I was using (a 386sx with gwbasic). I'm glad to see someone young into retro computers and books.
@StarwinMarvin15 ай бұрын
That's so cool. I had a C64 as a child and we had a magazine called 64'er. There were pages of programs to type out. And it was terrible if you made a mistake somewhere.
@kodenkm7 ай бұрын
I remember seeing these books as a kid, but never had a computer to type them in to. I remembered them again a couple of years back after seeing an Apple ][ emulator, but couldn't find the books anymore to try out the games. Thanks for the link to the books, I will give them a try over the holidays!
@karlwiklund21087 ай бұрын
These books were great! I had the text adventures book as a kid. I had a TI 99/4A, which wasn't one of the computers included in their code listings, so I really had to learn what the code was doing and then find out how the same was done on the TI; I couldn't just bang it out as written. It was annoying at the time, but probably helped me be a better abstract thinker, and ultimately, developer.
@5014eric7 ай бұрын
I had that book. I copied out the Haunted House program at age 13. I then used that engine to make a few other games.
@GeorgesChannel7 ай бұрын
Really great video, Kari! We 50+ oldtimers all started with BASIC in the 80's (my first computer was a commodore plus/4) and i still love codinf in BASIC. These books are really special. Thank you for sharing! Keep up your great content, which is authentinc and presented from the perspective from your new generation :)
@gerasmus7 ай бұрын
My brother and I used to spend weeks typing in code from magazines. More often, the published codes had spelling mistakes. Only ONE spelling mistake meant the program won't run. Commodore 64, it was 1984-1988.
@mikepanchaud12 ай бұрын
In the 80s, those computer listings will have been typeset manually by someone who probably had no knowledge of Basic, so they had many typos. But debugging was a great way to learn. I started with a ZX81, with the wobbly 16kB RAM pack.
@adam8727 ай бұрын
I loved those Usborne books back in the day. This video brings back a heap of memories of my childhood in the 80's, when I was learning BASIC.
@ripmad7 ай бұрын
Oh my gosh, so many memories coming back watching this! I was a commodore kid, Pet, VIC20, C64 and even C128. I always lived getting my new Compute magazine.. And hacking with the code.
@se4geniuses7 ай бұрын
I've not seen this mentioned in the comments, so I'll add this: by using one key to input a complete command, the Spectrum BASIC interpreter saved memory space that other versions of BASIC (usually made by Microsoft) needed to convert a fully typed command into the single byte token stored in RAM by the interpreter. It eliminated the need for a tokenizer and the data table holding the names of the commands. Please continue your wonderful videos!