The Computer Programme (1): It's Happening Now (Introduction to Computing)

  Рет қаралды 78,714

Jesús Zafra

Jesús Zafra

Күн бұрын

First Episode of this series about computers produced by the BBC. Casted in January 11, 1982.

Пікірлер: 208
@datasilouk1995
@datasilouk1995 9 жыл бұрын
Its a real shame that there are no computer programmes like this any more.
@IARRCSim
@IARRCSim 7 жыл бұрын
There are retro games and you could run some old operating systems/software in an emulator, if you really want.
@alfredklek
@alfredklek 7 жыл бұрын
IMHO there's no market for a show like this today. With the exception of a small group of nerds/early adopters (that's us BTW) most heavy technology users are digital natives who neither need nor care to know about the nuts and bolts of their digital devices. Furthermore, most modern OSes are systemically opaque which limits what one can easily do with the software. That being said, I'm a long time Linux user and I just might be crusty and out of touch. Give me that good ol' bash prompt....so I can type startx and jump back to the present.
@acmenipponair
@acmenipponair 7 жыл бұрын
Well, nothing has changed much, when you want to learn programming, you can still use this old programs and then move on which is perhabs even better than trying to start with C#, as you'll learn more about the insides of a computer first, but for most of the people the computer is just a tool and without a GUI they are not even able to do one thing :D
@typograf62
@typograf62 7 жыл бұрын
The final remarks are far more visionary than Bill Gates 640 kB. I've read a forecast from the early 70'ies, based on some American computer scientists thoughts, that came pretty close to the situation around 1985-1990. I DO think that good tv programmes about computers COULD be made today. But producers are too scared to bore the viewers. So it would be all "pop" and no "sense". In Denmark they still talk about good use of computers in basic school (function, the basics of programming, security, law, good behaviour, errors, limits ...) but the politicians fear the price (they would have to educate the teachers but prefer to bash them). So the results always ends at: Using Word and "making a homepage".
@ag3ntorange164
@ag3ntorange164 5 жыл бұрын
Even after 4 years your statement rings true. But still no programs unfortunately.
@TimelordUK
@TimelordUK 6 жыл бұрын
I looked forward to this programme every Sunday morning as a child
@sonicr360
@sonicr360 2 жыл бұрын
40 years later and here I am watching again this TV programme again! Just older now!
@simonpreston
@simonpreston 6 жыл бұрын
We'll probably, one day, find that our entire world is a simulation created by Phyllis.
@kirstm.2215
@kirstm.2215 6 жыл бұрын
simonpreston 😂😂
@TheSinj
@TheSinj 11 жыл бұрын
"Do I have to be a programmer mac?" "No Chris you can just buy a magazine and type in hundreds of lines of code and if you make one mistake it won't work." "Great, thanks."
@colinwilcox4266
@colinwilcox4266 4 жыл бұрын
happy days
@paulhalpin6301
@paulhalpin6301 7 жыл бұрын
This type of technology will never catch on
@CelticSaint
@CelticSaint 10 жыл бұрын
RIP Ian McNaught-Davis.
@ddalrymple1
@ddalrymple1 10 жыл бұрын
I want to go back in time and high five Phyllis the sweets shop owner. Up high Phyllis! You rock!
@datasilouk1995
@datasilouk1995 7 жыл бұрын
I wonder if the shop is still there?
@Retrochild1979
@Retrochild1979 7 жыл бұрын
40 sweets suppliers! Call Palmer and Harvey luv, they deal with all the big companies and supply you cigarettes and drinks too :-)
@guidadiehl9176
@guidadiehl9176 7 жыл бұрын
The mosque that replaced her razed-down store is far more vibrant and culturally enriching than her revolting, diabetes-inducing 'sweet shop' anyway. Phyllis was a relic of the past and the beautiful hand of diversity swept her aside. Thank Allah!
@IThinkYouLookLarvely
@IThinkYouLookLarvely 6 жыл бұрын
It's amazing to see someone that age in 1981 on a computer and knowing what they're doing. I guess that's the subtext behind most of the posts! The PC ones anyway (no pun intended).
@mikewatte4478
@mikewatte4478 5 жыл бұрын
@@henrybemis8913 yes there was always a bad smell from mr patel
@SimmeringPotpourri
@SimmeringPotpourri Жыл бұрын
I was watching Terry Stuart talk about the BBC Model B and he mentioned this show. As a kid, I'd watch anything about computers and there was one show I watched that featured the BBC computer. Of course, being in the US we didn't have access to these computers but as soon as I heard that intro theme music I knew this was the show I watched as a kid. It's so awesome to get to watch this again after so many years.
@stewartlynch1284
@stewartlynch1284 Жыл бұрын
The first time I ever used a computer was on the day of Monday, October 19, 1987. The computer I used was a BBC Micro. Now, 4 decades later, I am using technology to create innovations in autograph collecting. Computers were and always will be amazing.
@Pulsonar
@Pulsonar 7 жыл бұрын
Steve Furber, a chancellor at the Univ. of Manchester was a key man in the development of the BBC micro and Acorn computers (eventually became ARM - producing the king of todays processor cores that power a fair chunk of the worlds smartphones and tablets). I always found it amazing how a UK boffin of his stature with a formidable academic and industrial record pass through the streets of Manchester city centre barely noticed. Some years back if Steve Jobs or Bill Gates showed up in Market Street to buy a sandwich there would probably be gridlock from the city centre over the Pennines to Huddersfield!
@KeithZerna
@KeithZerna 8 жыл бұрын
Remember watching this series when it came out in 1982. Great to watch it again.
@TimelordUK
@TimelordUK 6 жыл бұрын
Keith Zerna I'm with you. I was so excited at this dawn of a new age. I was 15 and wanted to learn all about it
@ps200306
@ps200306 3 жыл бұрын
This was the year I left school and entered the IT industry, inspired by programs like this. It was the year I bought my Sinclair ZX81. I remember both the personal computers and the mainframes shown here. Even though I've been writing software ever since, I still can't get my head around how far we've come. The smartphone in my pocket is sixty times faster than the Cray-1 supercomputer from back then.
@JHollowayNetwork
@JHollowayNetwork 8 жыл бұрын
Kraftwerk's "Computer World" is used as a theme to the series.
@66rabidmonkey
@66rabidmonkey 5 жыл бұрын
I was just scrolling down to see if someone had already pointed that out. :)
@ag3ntorange164
@ag3ntorange164 5 жыл бұрын
This is actually a very significant part of computer history. The BBC Micro Computer featured was designed by Acorn Computers (It was already in development and was to be called The Proton) When Acorn won the contract to produce a computer for the BBC Literacy Project - it was adapted to the required specs and renamed the BBC MIcro Computer. A second processor could be added to the system via an expansion interface known as 'The Tube' Sophie Wilson of Acorn used a dual processor set up like this to design a simulation model, for a RISC CPU to power a new generation of Acorn 32-Bit machines known as 'Archimedes' That chip was called the Advanced RISC Machine or ARM, and formed an entirely new company. So that's right folks. No BBC Micro. No iPhone. It's that important.
@rogerwilco2558
@rogerwilco2558 4 жыл бұрын
Nicely put. Acorn were a remarkable company.
@anenglishmanplusamerican7107
@anenglishmanplusamerican7107 2 жыл бұрын
Cannot be prouder to to be half Englishman
@siaabeth
@siaabeth 3 жыл бұрын
Finally.. great to see this. I was 6 when I used to sit in front of Tv and just listen to the music and see the Owl mascot..❤️❤️❤️
@diamonddave2622
@diamonddave2622 8 жыл бұрын
very funny. £64 to fly to Paris with BA in 1982. Today its £61!
@jtpinnyc
@jtpinnyc Жыл бұрын
Love the old dear taking the dust cover off her computer every time she uses it.
@supermaster2012
@supermaster2012 9 жыл бұрын
I want to be the grandchild of that awesome programmer grandma!
@bourehimyoussef111
@bourehimyoussef111 4 жыл бұрын
That last speech was epic.
@crusader2.0_loading89
@crusader2.0_loading89 6 жыл бұрын
wow..found this ..I never knew what it was called, saw it as a child in 82...so happy, going to watch them all!
@marcel911
@marcel911 11 жыл бұрын
It is hard to believe this is over 30 years old now. I remember watching these when they were first on.
@asumjessen2013
@asumjessen2013 8 жыл бұрын
"what will it be used for? most of the time it will sit idle. and hopefully, will not be used to steal movies, show porn or god forbid kill television for good"
@DeathBringer769
@DeathBringer769 8 жыл бұрын
23:20 He totally called the mostly sitting idle part back then.
@acmenipponair
@acmenipponair 7 жыл бұрын
Well, when you don't play a computer game, your computer will mostly idle, yes, it's on, but doing browsing or text work is for a modern computer like driving with 10 km/h.
@asumjessen2013
@asumjessen2013 7 жыл бұрын
But I work on my laptop most of the day. I don't just play games on it.
@colinwilcox4266
@colinwilcox4266 9 жыл бұрын
the golden age of computers... the late 70s, early 80s
@colinwilcox4266
@colinwilcox4266 4 жыл бұрын
1978 to 1985 before Microsoft got hold.... golden age of programming
@martintunnicliffe8934
@martintunnicliffe8934 4 жыл бұрын
I remember watching this at work back in 1982. I was an apprentice, and the managers were so excited about the computer revolution, they made sure all the apprentices saw it. Mind you, the message hadn't really sunk in: they were still telling us that "draughtsman" was a good job to aim for, little knowing that CAD would soon make that skill redundant. However, one thing that bothered me back then - and still bothers me now - is this: what did owls flying into your house in the middle of the night have to do with anything?
@quackduck4090
@quackduck4090 2 жыл бұрын
could symbolise knowledge coming to you from the world through your screen? probably something like that
@cloerenjackson3699
@cloerenjackson3699 2 жыл бұрын
The owl was the logo of the BBC Micro, a computer made by Acorn in collaboration with the BBC in the year before this program was broadcast to establish computer literacy in Britain. The computer and television program coincided as part of that initiative. Clearly the owl represents education, wisdom, intelligence and erudition.
@MrDuncl
@MrDuncl 2 жыл бұрын
Depending on your definition "draughtsman" probably was a good job to choose. In 1981 I designed a PCB (for a helicopter) using old fashioned drafting tape etc. From then onwards I have used CAD systems. Little of what I learnt doing things the old way was wasted. Contrary to popular belief no manmade product designs itself. CAD makes it easier but someone has to understand what needs to be designed and how everything will fit together.
@leonjones7120
@leonjones7120 Жыл бұрын
Mac later suffered later with Alzheimers. Poor guy. He was great pioneer in computer education of the general public.
@gregjablunovsky841
@gregjablunovsky841 5 жыл бұрын
I watched this as a teen...now watching on my iPad it's profound
@iainbatchelor4414
@iainbatchelor4414 8 жыл бұрын
good to see the Philips Videopac G7000 briefly, it had the first ever intel processor and i still have mine! ive just got the C7010 chess module Videopac which needed it's own Z80 processor in order to be able to play chess, the good old days of gaming!
@maboroshi1986
@maboroshi1986 8 жыл бұрын
+Iain Batchelor actually if i remember right the videopac used the 8085... possibly the 8008. the first intel processor was the 4004.
@craigkelly4278
@craigkelly4278 2 жыл бұрын
God I remember learning to Program on a BBC Micro Computer good old days
@cirrosehepatica
@cirrosehepatica 10 жыл бұрын
Jesús Zafra thank you man i was looking for theses series thank you keepers, one day i will keep lots of material like this one. Good media that should not be forgoten
@glocalglocal
@glocalglocal 11 жыл бұрын
Wow! The whole series. Many thanks. It makes my work so much easier. Now I'll go looking for Making the Most of the Micro and Micro Live. Many thanks.
@TimelordUK
@TimelordUK 6 жыл бұрын
Wow making the most of the micro!!!! Forgot about that one
@bobsobol
@bobsobol 7 жыл бұрын
I don't suppose there's any way we can get hold of the original digitisation for these? (before KZbin smashed them into something like a US TV broadcast) They really need preserving, and I think I can clean up the pops and scraches, snow streaks and missing frames quite well. But for best results, it should really be converted to 50 progressive frames per second as a first step, and the (presumably) 576 interlaced fields have already been smashed into 480 progressive lines, and then blended from 50 interlaced fields per second up to 60 progressive frames per second. That _can_ be done acceptably, but not the way KZbin does it.
@maboroshi1986
@maboroshi1986 5 жыл бұрын
bobsobol the BBC have done it
@olliebrock5070
@olliebrock5070 7 жыл бұрын
computers took my landlords job at the pru in london in 2000 lol great invention anyhow.
@VideoTestSpace
@VideoTestSpace 11 жыл бұрын
Phillis the sweet shop lady / computer wizard - RIP.
@DataWaveTaGo
@DataWaveTaGo 10 жыл бұрын
At 23:22 "... you're going to find that most of the time that computer's going to sit there idle ..."
@avelione
@avelione 8 жыл бұрын
+DataWaveTaGo He missed entertainment, gaming and... porn...
@metropod
@metropod 5 жыл бұрын
“I find playing games on a computer degrading...” Someone would feel very silly in 2019 (Goes back to listing to this while playing “Civilization VI”)
@dogriffiths
@dogriffiths 3 жыл бұрын
True story: Phyllis closed the shop, changed her name to Satoshi Nakamoto, and took up programming full time.
@pigeonshouse
@pigeonshouse 11 жыл бұрын
I'd like to see what would happen nowadays if I cancelled a reservation 5 mins before departure with a major airline!
@kingcorduroy1686
@kingcorduroy1686 10 жыл бұрын
God the music is killer awesome. lol
@RetroGUY77
@RetroGUY77 9 жыл бұрын
It's Kraftwerk, Computer World! It is cool isn't it!!!
@kingcorduroy1686
@kingcorduroy1686 9 жыл бұрын
Yeah it is pretty cool, unfortunately it's only the little part that they used that I really like lol.
@Boschwash24
@Boschwash24 9 жыл бұрын
Kraftwerk song
@klaxoncow
@klaxoncow 2 жыл бұрын
50 million instructions per second to predict the weather, you say? **looks over at smartphone with several gigahertz clock speed and multiple cores, with a dedicated GPU** Impressive.
@piggypiggypig1746
@piggypiggypig1746 2 жыл бұрын
Yeah, 11 trillion operations per second on my iphone12. Carry it around in my pocket. Minds would have been blown back then. :)
@cominoengenharia
@cominoengenharia Жыл бұрын
"One day you'll have that same power in a chip as you have in this mainframe. And maybe in very few years"
@Ingens_Scherz
@Ingens_Scherz 10 жыл бұрын
They kind of talked a hell of a lot without saying anything at all in that programme. And the snobbishness about home computers and games is just pathetic. It was computer game programmers in the early 80s in Britain who stretched the capabilities and uses of early home computers to their very limits and basically drove future innovations like graphic interfaces and user-friendly applications. Thank God the teenage gamers and programmers and not the old school stuffed shirts won the day back then. I'm pretty proud that I was one of them!
@piggypiggypig1746
@piggypiggypig1746 5 жыл бұрын
silly games ;)
@DanafoxyVixen
@DanafoxyVixen 4 жыл бұрын
"It was computer game programmers in the early 80s in Britain who stretched the capabilities and uses of early home computers to their very limits and basically drove future innovations like graphic interfaces and user-friendly applications. " you know what inspired those kids to do all that? programs like this one and the BBC computer in schools that this show inspired.. so its funny when you say "They kind of talked a hell of a lot without saying anything at all in that programme" because the show was a big deal back then.. perhaps you should be more grateful, boy
@MrDuncl
@MrDuncl 2 жыл бұрын
It was parents watching this programme who probably paid for their kids first computer. How many kids said it was essential for them to have a computer in order to do their homework, and then used it to program a Shoot Em Up or similar? The plus side of that was that the U.K. never experienced the "Great Video Game Crash" which happened in the USA where most parents bought their kids an Atari 2600.
@bleeditdeath99
@bleeditdeath99 10 жыл бұрын
Man was this guy wrong about the computer being parked like the car... People are on this all day.
@paulb7964
@paulb7964 8 ай бұрын
Never really thought about kraftwerk doing the theme tune
@davidb1038
@davidb1038 3 жыл бұрын
It's amazing to think this is nearly 40 years ago,imagine having to go through all this now just to play a game,I'll never complain again about my mobile phone or iPad taking a millionth of a second to open an app and me complaining that it's to slow.
@Lord-DJ
@Lord-DJ 5 жыл бұрын
Excellent programme. Good old non-advertising BBC somehow get every school in the UK by 1986 to have a BBC Model B!!
@MrDuncl
@MrDuncl 2 жыл бұрын
Schools got Government grants so weren't put off by the £400 price tag and it made sense for most schools to be using the same type of computer. I'm sure that an American could tell a similar story about the Apple II in the USA. Apart from the parents who thought buying a BBC Micro would guarantee their children a place at Oxbridge, most of the U.K. population bought Spectrums and Commodores. p.s. Check out "Micro Men" for an amusing docudrama on how Acorn won the BBC contract.
@liverush24
@liverush24 9 ай бұрын
My school had tonnes of Model Bs. They had a few Atoms, too, & a big Apple of one type or another.
@marcb8934
@marcb8934 4 жыл бұрын
Computers were so good to enjoy and work on back then. I did programming to the BBC Micro B and Master models. Then on the Amstrad PCW8526 and PCW8512
@xKynOx
@xKynOx 5 күн бұрын
This was a good time for a kid i got a CPC 464 for "Education" all i did was play games.
@ajs41
@ajs41 5 жыл бұрын
I bet they didn't have Prestel in the United States.
@liverush24
@liverush24 9 ай бұрын
They'd only just got PRETZEL by '82.
@spootnik00
@spootnik00 4 ай бұрын
I came here for Phyllis RIP
@madcommodore
@madcommodore 2 жыл бұрын
This stark sobering intro is much better than the comedy sketch with Roy Kinnear of Porridge fame.
@liverush24
@liverush24 9 ай бұрын
Ronnie Barker?
@madcommodore
@madcommodore 9 ай бұрын
@@liverush24 Yup :)
@IThinkYouLookLarvely
@IThinkYouLookLarvely 6 жыл бұрын
Retro parody Look Around You must have been based on this as well as Tomorrow's World. Chris Serle = Peter Packard and Mac = Computer Jones. The looks at the camera Chris gives at the airport are lampooned by Serafinowicz perfectly. Also an early Olivia Colman visiting the sweetshop lady.
@caycloker901
@caycloker901 3 жыл бұрын
BESTEEE GRAT BROTAIN LEADERSS!" GRAN GRACIAS CHE GOES THUS AND UP MOORE!!
@8BitNaptime
@8BitNaptime Жыл бұрын
Oh god the Kraftwerk intro music is awesome
@Spillage66
@Spillage66 7 жыл бұрын
Chris Searl's head was tiny! He looked like Beaker!
@richardgregory3684
@richardgregory3684 4 ай бұрын
In part due to this, the Uk quickly became oen of the most computer owner and literate places in the world. And we threw it all away.
@ms-ex8em
@ms-ex8em Жыл бұрын
this is amazing i love pcs this is great (personal computers) are wonderful machines!!!!! i love them all (all of them) i love sooo much
@mikecawood
@mikecawood 7 жыл бұрын
The bloke near the end who is writing about computers and he is using a mechanical typewriter!
@MrDuncl
@MrDuncl 2 жыл бұрын
I recall he was the resident Party Pooper predicting that computers would cause mass unemployment etc. Of course nobody would have understood it in 1981 if you told them that KZbinr and Influencer would be jobs in the future.
@joeyjojoe
@joeyjojoe 4 ай бұрын
The good old days when you always used a dust cover for your precious computer rather than treating it like a disposable piece of office furniture or some garbage that just cradles your GPU, the only rhing worth Real Money
@malcolmclements9254
@malcolmclements9254 4 ай бұрын
2024 I'm watching this on my Android phone which of course is a computer.
@exiletomars
@exiletomars 11 жыл бұрын
OH MY GOD KRAFTWERK!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
@WereReallyRelayCamping
@WereReallyRelayCamping 8 жыл бұрын
that street for the sweet shop made me think york, but cant be i've lived here years and cant spot it, must be a more southern city like york, dont think they would have traveled so far for a 3 minute spot
@bobsobol
@bobsobol 7 жыл бұрын
They travelled to Norway, Germany, Japan and the U.S. just for research before making this program. With computer literacy in the state it was in the U.K. at that time, if she submitted what she was doing to a phone-in, magazine or newspaper request for ideas, saying that she was doing her small business accountancy on a micro-computer in her sweet shop, both for her self and for others, then she's _exactly_ what they wanted to show, and wanted to get British small businesses and the recently unemployed from heavy industry thinking about and doing.
@henrybemis8913
@henrybemis8913 6 жыл бұрын
I suppose poor old Phyllis is now passed on and her sweet shop is now a Halal Grocery or something...RIP....
@Pulsonar
@Pulsonar 7 жыл бұрын
Great Kraftwerk intro...
@allluckyseven
@allluckyseven 9 жыл бұрын
...Who until ten years ago would be making their own TV sets. Wait, what?! People would actually build their own tvs in the 70s?!
@grappydingus
@grappydingus 8 жыл бұрын
+allluckyseven Yes, You could actually buy this kit at one time! www.ebay.com/itm/HEATHKIT-Manual-Television-Model-GR-2001-Complete-Set-including-Schematic-/172164592857?hash=item2815cf34d9:g:QzMAAOSw8RJXC~N1
@MrDuncl
@MrDuncl 2 жыл бұрын
A college classmate bought a bargain £99 colour monitor for his BBC micro. The reason for the low price was that it was a bare chassis designed to fit in a computer game console like Asteroids, so he had to make his own case. So you could say that in the 1980s there were people making their own computer monitors :-)
@gosunkugi
@gosunkugi 10 жыл бұрын
At 22 minutes in we see a grim prophecy. The story of what happened to Cray and the way the Japanese destroyed them makes shocking reading. Makes you wonder what the world would be like today if Cray continued to dominate the market.
@chrisjohns7019
@chrisjohns7019 10 жыл бұрын
Er, perhaps not. Cray was, and is, in a niche market at the high end of computer cost and performance. However, the company had revenue of over $525 million in 2013, employs over 1000 people (and growing) and has at least 3 of the top 10 fastest computers installed in the world (see the Top500 list), including the #2 fastest computer, behind only a one-off special system in China.Check out Blue Waters at NCSA, and Titan at Oak Ridge.
@gosunkugi
@gosunkugi 10 жыл бұрын
Chris Johns Yes, today. However I'm referring to 1982. The rise of Cray in the early 80s was one where they were projected to dominate the industry, but they were reliant on chips that the Japanese monopolised. The Japanese companies such as Fujitsu "chip dumped", selling the goods too cheaply for other companies to make a profit, thus putting them out of business and forcing American industries like Cray to become dependant on Japanese manufacture. It came to a point where Cray simply could not build what they wanted to keep ahead of the game thanks to overseas interference. My point is, what if that never happened? $525 million revenue might seem a lot, but with nothing to stop the projected rise of Cray, can you imagine what computing would be like?
@chrisjohns7019
@chrisjohns7019 10 жыл бұрын
gosunkugi Cray struggled in the 1990s because of the increasing speed of microprocessors and problems with company management, and not because the Japanese were dumping chips. The extremely expensive vector CPUs that Cray produced maxed out in the T90 at around 1.8 Gigaflops, which by the late 1990s, was not very good compared to a cluster of microprocessors (which is why all modern supercomputers are now massively parallel systems using microprocessors). Occasionally, a sale might have been lost due to a Japanese company selling a machine at a loss, but that was the exception. The end of the cold war also didn't help, at around this same time, which resulted in Cray being sold to Silicon Graphics (SGI) in 1996, and then spun out to Tera (renamed to Cray Inc.) in 2000. In terms of chips, Cray used to have a small IC fab, but those are hugely expensive facilities, and there was no way that Cray could stay in that game and keep up with Intel, AMD, MIPS and IBM with processors. So now, Cray systems use thousands (or more) of CPUs from AMD or Intel, DRAM chips from the few vendors that make memory parts, and designs and builds systems where these parts are tightly integrated with a high-speed interconnect, I/O and cooling. And in any case, I really don't see your point about what computing would be like. If what? If Cray diversified into making its own high-end microprocessors light years ahead of Intel? That was never even a remote possibility.
@phrtao
@phrtao 2 жыл бұрын
The world was a much better place when computers had their own room (or even own building). They were operated by pretty young secretaries and watched over by awkward men in white coats. The damn things have taken over the world and most of our lives
@sunsetblue1759
@sunsetblue1759 7 жыл бұрын
I started writing code in high school 2-3 years before this. The hardware was clunky, the software was more unforgiving and so on. I think the program does a great job though, in showing the vagueness of it all. Computers great, programs wonderful........but we aren't too sure what to do with it all. There were a few ideas and some of the early work was on control and telemetry systems. I was working for a large utility about 5 years after this and programs in card stacks were used for bill printing control processes. I remember my Computer Science homework one week - write code to draw a counter-clockwise reverse space spiral on a Commodore Pet, stopping when the entire screen was filled in. The following week's homework was to make it the fastest possible - my first experience writing Assembler. Celebrating 30 years in the software profession this year (Infosec Engineer), I never had any idea what my career was going to give me :) The difference - in that day, the most powerful computers were used for Meteorology. Today, they are used for Climatology. Well that, and the Chinese have the biggest boxes today (even if they sometimes measure GPU's instead of CPU's) : www.top500.org/list/2016/11/?page=1
@maboroshi1986
@maboroshi1986 5 жыл бұрын
Sunset Blue I find the show did what it set out to do perfectly. BBC docs are so often dry but they also balance depth with presenting an interesting subject in a way that won't make you tube out. There are loads of places in show where it's clear that they could have gone into excruciating detail but held back because there was no way to go into it in a way that works.
@phielcyco
@phielcyco Жыл бұрын
it was great and inspiring to me as teen boy... : )
@thesteaktc
@thesteaktc 7 жыл бұрын
Air travel not quite the same now. You can't cancel a ticket at the last minute or get to the airport and only then pay for your reservation!
@piggypiggypig1746
@piggypiggypig1746 5 жыл бұрын
but at least it doesn't cost £1000 to fly London to Paris
@ps200306
@ps200306 3 жыл бұрын
Calling 2017 from the pandemic-ridden world of the future ... now you can't fly at all!
@ttwilightzzone
@ttwilightzzone 7 жыл бұрын
It's interesting that linux fulfilled that computer "revolution" to most of the worlds population in the form of Android and ARM.
@1066gaz
@1066gaz 2 жыл бұрын
The year the spectrum was born. Chris serle was on the tv alot, especially that's life.
@markboulton954
@markboulton954 2 жыл бұрын
Those who say "people of today don't need to know how things were before in order to operate what we have now" unfortunately confuse it with the implied, but false aspersion, "people of today wouldn't benefit from knowing how things were before in order to appreciate what we have now".
@GregRobsonUK
@GregRobsonUK 10 жыл бұрын
What's this? A programme about technology with a Kraftwerk intro? How unlikely!
@colinwilcox4266
@colinwilcox4266 5 жыл бұрын
essential viewing back in the 80s.
@chelocheliniXD
@chelocheliniXD 6 жыл бұрын
Welcome back to the Joy of Computer Programme. I'm Bob Ross, and today we're ...
@paulrazzell9827
@paulrazzell9827 Жыл бұрын
The better the faster computer then 40 years ago.😎
@jackahorey2354
@jackahorey2354 2 жыл бұрын
Thought it was the beginning of Bananaman for a moment.
@liverush24
@liverush24 9 ай бұрын
I didn't like that cartoon. The animation was sloppy & the voices grated.
@Lensman864
@Lensman864 6 жыл бұрын
"... and you can play silly games on them." Ahhh. The arrogance of the old facing the new. Those silly games drove the coders that literally built the modern world.
@HO-bndk
@HO-bndk Жыл бұрын
And just think what they could have done if they hadn't wasted so much time on games.
@Alianger
@Alianger 2 жыл бұрын
1:45 The music sounds like something out of the FF series
@leefr76
@leefr76 3 ай бұрын
6:20 Bob Hoskins narrating the commercial.
@lilth501
@lilth501 3 жыл бұрын
Did I hear that right it took that woman in the small shop several hours a night to do her book work? Before the computer came into her life and changed all that?
@ajs41
@ajs41 5 жыл бұрын
£64 in 1982 would be about £230 today. A lot of money for a one hour flight from London to Paris.
@AcornElectron
@AcornElectron 3 жыл бұрын
Heh, I was 5 and not far off receiving my first real computer to replace my Philips G7000. Thanks for the upload although it’s on iplayer now
@mikewatte4478
@mikewatte4478 5 жыл бұрын
My mum looked at me in shock when i told her i paid 1200 for an apple
@LiaThePenguinologist
@LiaThePenguinologist 7 жыл бұрын
ah yes, 1982, the information technology year. I had noticed that.
@what-uc
@what-uc 9 жыл бұрын
11:30 I wish he'd said a floppy disk is more flexible than a cassette :)
@johno4521
@johno4521 3 жыл бұрын
Fascinating programme. Even then they knew how fast the computer revolution was going to take off. 40 years on though, does the average consumer have access to 100x CRAY computing power as predicted?
@MrDuncl
@MrDuncl 2 жыл бұрын
Absolutely. However, computers like the Cray didn't have to deal with things like graphical user interfaces and touchscreens. Fun Fact; The Space Shuttle used 64KByte computers. That was all that was required to fly it back from Space. Obviously it wasn't trying to do anything really difficult, like voice recognition.
@Aspergianfirestarter
@Aspergianfirestarter 8 жыл бұрын
The presenter is 6 feet 10. True
@colinwilcox4266
@colinwilcox4266 5 жыл бұрын
Wrong, 6ft 4. Met him back in 86 when he was doing Making The Most of The Micro for BBC. Very nice guy
@johneygd
@johneygd 7 жыл бұрын
Awesome intro & outro tune. The gray supercomputer was a beast,sohow does it compare with the iphone 7? Either way it's amezing.
@JonnyInfinite
@JonnyInfinite 7 жыл бұрын
johneygd Kray you mean. A modern smartphone is several orders of magnitude more powerful than the Kray 1
@dronespace
@dronespace 4 ай бұрын
❤ Phyllis
@05Rudey
@05Rudey 11 жыл бұрын
I've decided I want to fly to Paris... One Ticket? Hmmmmm. Oh what a shame. LOL
@iandennis1
@iandennis1 2 жыл бұрын
I wonder how many takes they did talking about Stonehenge. Judging by the put on laughing, several
@ninjacat230
@ninjacat230 2 жыл бұрын
I was not expecting kraftwerk
@Bod8998
@Bod8998 4 жыл бұрын
Great theme tune
@klaxoncow
@klaxoncow 2 жыл бұрын
Kraftwerk for the theme tune. How cool is that?
@SigmundJaehn
@SigmundJaehn 4 жыл бұрын
Making their own television sets? Whaaat?
@UNIX32
@UNIX32 3 ай бұрын
4:55 - Ave Omnissiah!
@DaveMcGarry
@DaveMcGarry 4 жыл бұрын
An ordinary, every-day domestic cassette.
@cosmicwartoad2587
@cosmicwartoad2587 Жыл бұрын
Sacrifice a politician seeing they have no prom sacrificing everybody else in their wars.
@henrybemis8913
@henrybemis8913 6 жыл бұрын
If the people in 1982 could be shown an IPhone or IPad they would wet themselves.....
@joojoojeejee6058
@joojoojeejee6058 6 жыл бұрын
And they would faint if they saw all the obese people of today.
@ajs41
@ajs41 5 жыл бұрын
Touch screens had already been invented in 1982. They were available to use at EPCOT Center in Florida.
@MrDuncl
@MrDuncl 2 жыл бұрын
I was trying to explain "The Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy" to my wife. "He's got this device .......... Like an iPad". What's more the Wikipedia entry for Earth is slightly more comprehensive than "Mostly Harmless".
@orderofmagnitude-TPATP
@orderofmagnitude-TPATP 3 жыл бұрын
Is that a commodore 64? Didn't know they were out in 82....
@liverush24
@liverush24 9 ай бұрын
It's a Commodore Vic 20. Outwardly the same, but a lighter colour.
@orderofmagnitude-TPATP
@orderofmagnitude-TPATP 9 ай бұрын
@@liverush24 ahh right
@ms-ex8em
@ms-ex8em 2 жыл бұрын
Why cant Windows 11 be stored in rom chips - it would be quicker to load than from hard disk or solid state disks!!
@richardgregory3684
@richardgregory3684 2 жыл бұрын
Because you could not update and patch it, for one.
@MrDuncl
@MrDuncl 2 жыл бұрын
@@richardgregory3684 Or get the OS infected by viruses etc. Another reason would be that Microsoft would actually have to test their code themselves rather than getting the public to do it for them :-)
@thundurr
@thundurr 2 жыл бұрын
@@MrDuncl I think not having software updates from the company is a WAY bigger issue.
Whoa
01:00
Justin Flom
Рет қаралды 56 МЛН
Секрет фокусника! #shorts
00:15
Роман Magic
Рет қаралды 72 МЛН
He bought this so I can drive too🥹😭 #tiktok #elsarca
00:22
Elsa Arca
Рет қаралды 45 МЛН
Making The Most Of The Micro Episode 1
24:06
gdvlugt
Рет қаралды 12 М.
Making the Most of the Micro (Part 5) - Keeping a Record - BBC 1983
25:17
The Centre for Computing History
Рет қаралды 1,4 М.
The Computer Programme (11th Jan 1982) [Replay] | Nostalgia Nerd
25:36
The Computer Chronicles - UNIX (1985)
28:12
The Computer Chronicles
Рет қаралды 144 М.
Vintage Computing 1982 - BBC's The Computer Programme Episode 1
24:45
Original Elite on the BBC B - Computerphile
16:15
Computerphile
Рет қаралды 197 М.
1986: The Joy of E-MAIL | Micro Live | Retro Tech | BBC Archive
10:12
Whoa
01:00
Justin Flom
Рет қаралды 56 МЛН