Sinclair QL - Was It Really THAT Bad?

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  • čas přidán 20. 05. 2024
  • The first 1,000 people to use this link will get a 1 month free trial of Skillshare: skl.sh/danwood06211
    The Sinclair QL is often regarded as one of the worst computers of the 1980s and a system that couldn't find a market, but was it actually underrated? I take a look!
    - Mentioned in the video -
    Nigel Searle Interview: theretrohour.com/sinclair-ins...
    QL vDrive: vdrivezx.com/vdriveql/
    QL Games: www.dilwyn.me.uk/games/
    Bandersnatch QL: qlforum.co.uk/viewtopic.php?t...
    The Distribution: sinclairql.net/repository.html
    My retro gaming podcast: theretrohour.com
    My Twitter: / danwood_uk
    My Facebook: / danwooduk
    ▬ Contents of this video ▬
    0:00 - Sinclair QL History
    3:55 - QL Unboxing
    7:20 - Documentation
    7:48 - Microdrives
    8:30 - vDrive SD Card Solution
    8:45 - Sinclair QL Hardware Tour
    11:05 - Skillshare Sponsor Message
    12:25 - Sinclair QL Power On & Test
    14:18 - vDrive SD Card Setup & Load
    19:15 - Sinclair QL Demos & Games
    21:03 - Secrets of The Sinclair QL
    Sources used in this video (with permission or under fair use):
    Sir Clive Sinclair | 4 Computer Buffs | Retro Computers | 1985: • Sir Clive Sinclair | 4...
    Sinclair C5 (original TV advert): • Sinclair C5 (original ...
    Sinclair QL Vintage computer Advert (VHS Capture): • Sinclair QL Vintage co...
    Sinclair QL Launch Press Conference: • Sinclair QL Launch Pre...
    Rick Dickison QL & Beyond:
    www.flickr.com/photos/9574086...
    Micro Men - 720p (2009): • Micro Men - 720p (2009)
    Sinclair QL Presentation: • Sinclair QL Presentation
    Commercial Breaks - The Battle For Santa's Software: • Commercial Breaks - Th...
    #RetroGaming #Sinclair #RetroComputing #SinclairQL
  • Věda a technologie

Komentáře • 573

  • @bertram-raven
    @bertram-raven Před rokem +73

    The Sinclair QL actually came with a game built in! When you initially opened the box it contained a cool game of Scrabble as usually all the keys had fallen off in transit.

    • @zezo-hg1cr
      @zezo-hg1cr Před rokem +1

      japan made nec products of japan nec

    • @robertbrown3413
      @robertbrown3413 Před 2 měsíci +1

      The number '8' key was missing on mine... so I nicked one from the demo QL in Boots... noticing several keys were missing from it already!
      The only shoplifting I ever did, honest guv!

  • @roelsfotoos
    @roelsfotoos Před 7 měsíci +11

    Coming from the Spectrum 48k in 1987, being able to easily expand QL SuperBasic with your own procedures and functions written in machine code were the most valuable (and time consuming😆) features of the QL to me. I still have the code for solving Mastermind with up to 9 colors in the blink of an eye, running the game of Life and lots of mathematical functions like PRIME, the Euler phi-function etc. All those extensions worked way faster than when written on a pc in almost any programming language, just from SuperBasic! Owned GoldCard and SuperGoldCard too, those were great expansion cards. Never experienced any QL hardware problems whatsoever by the way. Took me years to move from QL to pc because for me there were hardly any benefits to leave the QL. Thank you Sir Clive (and everyone at Sinclair!) for the joy you brought into my life!

  • @CZ350tuner
    @CZ350tuner Před rokem +10

    Back in 1985, I was an electronics technician, working at a company called Lumic Ltd. The office computer was a Sinclair QL.

  • @mark12358
    @mark12358 Před 2 lety +8

    Good video. However, to answer your question: it was not underrated, it was underpowered and too early pushed to market, against future 68k powerhouses like Mac, ST and Amiga

  • @swadeyboy5675
    @swadeyboy5675 Před 2 lety +31

    I ran my business on one of these in the 80's. Using the Psion software pack and an accounts package. Easel and Quill were brilliant.

    • @blackterminal
      @blackterminal Před rokem

      What printer did you use?

    • @markusm.lambers8893
      @markusm.lambers8893 Před rokem +1

      ​@@blackterminal I used a serial printer, (9-needle NLQ - "Brother") who had serial and parallel (centronics) ports! With a black and green Philips Monitor with BAS-input (Video-signal)
      This was my first 'real computer', until 1992 switching to an 'IBM-clone', ... ! (386SX 16MHz 625Mb RAM) I 'used' and abused my 'Sinclair QL' a lot in this time!

  • @decidedly_retro
    @decidedly_retro Před 2 lety +7

    I never had any problems with Microdrives, well until the foam tape pressure pads on all carts all became dust in about 2015. They were all made with foam from the same batch.
    Technically the data rate is higher than 720K 3.5" floppy drives. However, if you miss a sector on a cartridge (or cart as they were always known, not "wafer". A "wafer" was the media for the Spectrum's wafer drive.) you had to wait for it came around the tape again.
    Oh, and the QL was/is an excellent 68000 development platform.

  • @russ1669
    @russ1669 Před 10 měsíci +5

    My Dad bought me a QL just after they came out. I learned super basic and spent 4 years writing all sorts of utilities for it. I backed up all my software (both shop bought and my own) and only remember getting the backups out once. I loved this machine, but did prefer the IBM with 3.5" floppy that I started borrowing from the shop I worked in a few years later.
    I remember sending 4 blank cartridges to a software house for 4 free games, and also the adverts for a game with a nasty looking crow or vulture that I could never afford (because I spent all my pocket money on blank micro drive carts to back up my software). Just remembered to add that the manual was fantastic. I had hand written notes on every page.

  • @jon-paulfilkins7820
    @jon-paulfilkins7820 Před 2 lety +15

    The folk lore* is that the QL was massively discounted at the same time that rumours of the ST and Amiga started (and Amiga may have been seen at a trade show, but no internet/video capture of the day, only NNTP Newsgroups and Fidonet email meant it was definably a rumour mill. So a number of developers and coders purchased QLs to learn Motorola 68000 machine code to get a head start. It was suggested that this was why a lot of UK companies were producing very good games on the Atari ST/Amiga platforms so early on.
    * like most folk lore, probably a grain of truth, but we will never know for sure.

    • @schrodingerscat1863
      @schrodingerscat1863 Před rokem +3

      More than a grain of truth in that, I knew a couple of devs that did just that. At the time it was by far the cheapest machine to get into 68000 assembler coding.

  • @AERVBlog
    @AERVBlog Před 2 lety +7

    I had a pair of these running at opposite ends of the building through the built in network. I also had a 5MB hard drive attached which was shared by both machines. The girl at the front desk liked it. She mostly used Abacus and Quill. I wish I still had it.

  • @JustB3NJI
    @JustB3NJI Před 2 lety +9

    Clive I hope in the end saw that the Spectrum did achieve what he hoped just not in the way he planned. It might not have been used for education in schools, but it did educate thousands of people in coding...And it might not have been used by businesses, but those coders who went on to make games created businesses and plenty of profit for existing ones.

  • @thomasrotweiler
    @thomasrotweiler Před 2 lety +33

    Interesting to see someone discovering the QL after all this time. Despite it's drawbacks - all too apparent to users, with time and a healthy bank balance you could upgrade it into a useful machine. A disk interface with extra RAM with a dual floppy drive was a good place to start - with 512K or 640K you could quite a lot more than the standard machine was capable of. Having the application software on floppies meant much quicker load times and a relatively secure storage medium. The Quill word processor and Archive database software could be programmed and customised - I used the database for magazine subscription data and address label printing. As time went on there were various GUI options available, you could have mice as well as joysticks. The price of the customisation though was a lack of standardisation - nightmare for software development. Games software was limited - the 128K QL wasn't a brilliant platform for arcade games but fine for adventures, puzzles, etc. If you needed speed you had to use machine code. These days if you're buying old machines you may need a new keyboard membrane - they fail over time and re-capping is also advised. Oh and check the power supply before plugging anything in. Enjoy :)

    • @fogvarious2478
      @fogvarious2478 Před 2 lety +1

      I have a few that needs updates .. the microdrive choice was really the bad thing

    • @TheRealWindlePoons
      @TheRealWindlePoons Před 2 lety +2

      You are quite correct but for similar cash outlay you could buy one of the CP/M alternatives which would be more reliable and had more commercial software. The fact that the CP/M alternative was entirely 8 bit didn't matter much as the QL's 8 bit data bus slowed it right down.
      I own a QL and have used CP/M kit professionally. The QL was sold as a business machine but it was actually no more than something for the keen hobbyist.
      The first affordable microcomputer I remember with a GUI included was the Amstrad (sold under the Schneider brand in Germany) PC which came with GEM. Personally, I found GEM a big disappointment and cheerfully went back to using the command line.

    • @Kholaslittlespot1
      @Kholaslittlespot1 Před 2 lety +1

      Are you allowed to say what magazine you worked for? Was it computer related? Very cool anyway!

  • @dewietze
    @dewietze Před 2 lety +3

    Hiho. Thanks for giving some attention to the sinclair ql system :). Im amazed to see our game conversion of Maziacs (Bugziacs) featured in your video. Kudos!

  • @CaptainDangeax
    @CaptainDangeax Před 2 lety +7

    When I was young, I had a C64 and of course, I stayed tuned to see what's new on the market. Amstrad CPC ? bumpy scrolling poor sprites and awful sound. Atari ST ? Yeah, but not impressed by the sound. Now you show the QL. Seriously, what was Sir Clive thinking ? Microdrive ? beeper ? I eventually switched my C64 for an Amiga 500

  • @TDax
    @TDax Před 2 lety +3

    I had a QL.....well I actually had two QLs (I got a spare after the price drop). I mostly used it as a word processor, writing assignments for my degree and professional qualification. I was a big fan of quill ....my first WYSIWYG experience. Funny enough I later used quill on an early IBM PC..
    I had the ????? Cub monitor (pretty sure it was a cub)....picture quality was awesome for the time. Only game I ever had for it was a cowboy adventure game (still played games on my spectrum). I eventually upgraded to an a strand 286 pc....the QLs are sitting in my loft ....after seeing this video I am very tempted to dig them out and have a play

  • @grantbanstead1971
    @grantbanstead1971 Před 2 lety +8

    I visited a company that had 3 networked QLs but they spent so much time and effort trying to get them stable they went under. Sad as they spent hours working only to lose it all again and again. So many tears.

    • @TheRealWindlePoons
      @TheRealWindlePoons Před 2 lety +2

      The problem with much new technology was (and is) the cost of the time to implement and maintain it. In my experience, reliable kit with a higher price tag frequently has a lower cost of ownership, particularly for a business...

    • @6581punk
      @6581punk Před rokem

      The technology wasn't quite ready. ICL bought up the QLs and produced a product with a QL and phone integrated called One Per Desk which seemed to work fine. I guess they stabilised it.

  • @CyberhugTechnologies
    @CyberhugTechnologies Před 2 lety +18

    Definitely one of my ever favorites Dan, thanks for the video and the part of it as a tribute to Sir Clive.
    I couldn't get enough of its Super-basic back then as a teen, still today i do consider it as the best basic back then, along with the BBC basic of course. The micro-drives ruined the reputation of this machine over time. If one could get hands on the THOR machine (CST), would have the ultimate overview for the abilities of this machine - bottom-line is the original configuration ruined the future of this wonderful machine actually.

  • @techkev140
    @techkev140 Před 2 lety +9

    Really wanted a QL at the time. It had more processing power than my ZX Spectrum. By the time i had the money the 16-bit era had seriously arrived and i went with the Atari ST and a bit later the Amiga. I feel i kind of missed out on something.
    Microdrives... In the last years of owing a Spectrum (originally a Sinclair 48K, then an Amstrad made 128K +2) I bought a couple of Microdrives with the Sinclair Interface 1 (it did work with Amstrad built 128K +2). I had also heard these drive were unreliable, but... I copied a lot of my own (home written) software onto them and even a few commercial apps. I recall, The Artist an art package, when it loaded it clearly demonstrated the Microdrives unreliability and reliability. The loading screen which would appear in typical line by line loading from cassette tape, appeared almost at once. However parts of the image where missing, the drive would attempt to reread the data eventually retrieving it. I was astounded by the fact it kept trying again and again to load the missing data, in an almost patchy/random manner, but it was very quick so the tape must have looped fast. Anti piracy inspired custom tape loading, used by games of the day would likely translate poorly to such a system. Although inventive minds would likely have adapted, had it caught on. Amazing times.

  • @blahorgaslisk7763
    @blahorgaslisk7763 Před rokem +4

    Having worked on these they were certainly not that bad. In my experience they were pretty reliable, and I worked RMA support for a distributor so I saw every return we had. The drives usually didn't break, but the cartridges were not all that reliable. The tape tended to stretch with use. I wrote a little program that just reformated the cartridge over and over, and after some hours the capacity had increased some due to the tape stretching. Once it stopped to increase the tape was pretty much stretched as much as it would and it would stay stable after that.
    ICL also used the QL as the base for their OPD or One Per Desk. It was a pretty interesting machine that I got to work with some years later when I worked service and support for ICL. It integrated a telephone, answering machine (kind of), mail system, serial terminal and normal computer functions. The phone part consisted of a handset and a modem with "speech" capability. You booted of a micro drive and there were a contact list, calendar, the "answering" system and mail system loaded. The contact list could be used to place a phone call, send a mail, book meetings or print addresses on labels and envelopes.
    The phone answering system was pretty rudimental. You had to enter the message as text and it was read back to the caller using a speech synthesizer. As I worked in Sweden the speech synthesis sounded even worse than for English, but you could code it using phonetics notation to get it understandable. As you might have guessed that wasn't used much where I worked. It also had some limited multi selection capability so you could make a kind of answering menu where the caller would enter number to select what they wanted. So you could get a log of who had called about say support, repair or other issues.
    The mail system as glorious, not. It wasn't email as we know it today as it was exclusively a ICL OPD thing. Sending a mail meant the OPD would call the recipients OPD and upload the message. So the receiver has to have an OPD, it ahs to be on and you have to know their phone number or at least have it in your contact list. I think you could send contact information, but I'm not sure anymore. So while advanced in it's primitive way, it was not as slick as email is today.
    The calendar also integrated with the phone and mail system to book to send and receive bookings for meetings and such.
    At work I used the OPD to burn BIOS for ICL computers onto E-PROM. Their PC line seriously sucked back then. Customers would call and tell me what machine they had and what program or peripheral they had a problem with and I'd dive into the PAPER version of the documentation and look up if there was a bios version for that machine that would allow whatever to work. Sometimes it was a case of "If you want programs X, Y and Zed to work you can't run Lotus 123. You will have to choose between X and Y. I've got BIOS that will work with either of them, Zed and Lotus, but not both at the same time."
    And yes these were supposed to be IBM PC compatibles. All techs at ICL hated them, but we couldn't say that in public at the time. Eventually ICL bought first a smaller PC server manufacturer I can't remember the name of, but their machines were infinitely better than what ICL had in the PC range, and then they bought Nokia PC. Yes that Nokia. This was when the mobile business took off for Nokia so they divested themselves of amongst other things their PC branch. And the PC techs as ICL were cheering!
    Well anyway, as you understand we were into the PC era, and yet we were still using the OPD at ICL back then. And it kind of made sense. It was pretty capable when treated as a phone and communication device. And if all you needed was a to write some mail, and I'm talking about the dead tree type snail mail, then it had you covered.

  • @magicknight8412
    @magicknight8412 Před 2 lety +10

    My dad came home with one of these and we spent hours exploring the software and getting everything going. I think he did some home accounts on it. Sadly there was not much software available for it anywhere and we back to using my Amstrad 6128. Still have the QL somewhere :)

  • @johnsavard7583
    @johnsavard7583 Před 2 lety +21

    The Sinclair QL was an amazing and exciting product... but the Microdrive killed it. One can praise the computer itself, but there's no way to make excuses for the Microdrive. Or for the attempt to use wafer-scale integration as a replacement for the hard drive. Attempting to cut costs by using wildly unproven technology is just plum crazy, and he should have had enough sense to know that.

    • @fischX
      @fischX Před 2 lety +2

      It was 5 years to late for what it is.

    • @RicardoBanffy
      @RicardoBanffy Před 2 lety +3

      The microdrive, the 8-bit memory bus, the lacking graphics and sound... Other 68K computers were the Mac (which had at least 8-bit PCM audio and high-res mono graphics), the Amiga and the Atari ST.

    • @herrbonk3635
      @herrbonk3635 Před 2 lety

      @@RicardoBanffy It indeed seemed very slow, jugding from this demonstration (and from the 68008 data sheet and programming manual). But in what way did it lack graphics?

    • @RicardoBanffy
      @RicardoBanffy Před 2 lety +3

      @@herrbonk3635 its graphics aren't comparable to either ST or Amiga - while the pixel count is OK, the palette is fixed, and screen resolution is lower than a base Mac or ST monochrome. I like it, but it was a hard sell back then.

    • @herrbonk3635
      @herrbonk3635 Před 2 lety +4

      @@RicardoBanffy Yes, the fixed (and ugly) palette on the ZX-computers, as well as on many others of the time, always baffled me. It had been a pretty easy and cheap fix to make it variable. Just a small hardvare register the CPU could write to, in order to change the values of a simple resistor D/A.

  • @Doug_in_NC
    @Doug_in_NC Před 2 lety +8

    There was also a more expensive and even less successful version of the QL that was sold by ICL (International Computers Limited) to business users called the OPD (one per desk). It had a proper keyboard and a built in telephone, and the idea was that it would be the only piece of electronics you needed on your desk (hence the name). I only remember seeing it reviewed in the computer press, unlike the QL itself, but I know it was actually released at (I think) 999 British pounds

    • @terminaljunk
      @terminaljunk Před 2 lety +5

      At one point in the early 90's I actually had an OPD, no idea where it came from as I was only a kid but remember great times messing with the answering machine / voice synthesiser, me and my brother had something of a competition going as to who could come up with the most "creative" message. Pretty sure one of the stringy floppy tapes or possibly a ROM pack had some kind of terminal emulator to allow access to BBS', always wanted to try and dial something up but never got the chance. Dare say that for word processing, and everyday spreadsheet use one would still be usable today - have always said to people "a computer will never be obsolete all the time it can still do what it was designed / intended for"

  • @talideon
    @talideon Před 2 lety +6

    I think it's best compared with the ST: barebones hardware, lots of off-the-shelf parts, but one was actually a reasonably competent desktop machine, while the other had an awful keyboard and microdrives. Sure, there was a year and a bit between the launch of the two, and the ST was more expensive, but the QL was just engineered down way too much, and would've made more sense as a business machine if it at least came with the 68k version of CP/M or something.

    • @ian_b
      @ian_b Před 2 lety +2

      That was always Sinclair's problem, he always engineered down too far while yearning, paradoxically, for the professional market.

    • @talideon
      @talideon Před 2 lety +2

      @@ian_b Which is fine if you're aiming at the bottom end of the market, which was the case with everything up to the Spectrum, but not with the QL. The funny thing is that it was salvageable in a lot of ways, like replacing the 68008 with a 68000 (which was still using a crippled, low-cost bus), replacing the microdrives with a 3" or 3.5" floppy drive, and a keyboard designed with typing in mind while keeping the general aesthetic of the machine. It was just so tragically close to being good...

    • @ian_b
      @ian_b Před 2 lety +2

      @@talideon I think his mistake was thinking that he could push up into the business market from the bottom. To be fair, that did work for Amstrad with the PCW, which for a lot of businesses was their first word processor, because it was cheap by being engineered down.
      But thinking about it as I type this; they didn't know or care about it using a cheap old Z80 processor with the "roller RAM" bodge/stroke of genius to make the screen updates a reasonable speed, the didn't care the printer was completely empty and entirely slaved to the CPU. This did see something with a proper keyboard, floppy disks and a "real" printer. It did one job and did it well, at a low price with everything they needed included.
      Sinclair cut all the wrong corners with stuff that was visible and significant to the purchaser.

    • @jkeelsnc
      @jkeelsnc Před 2 lety

      The ST was at least a thoroughly modern computer for its time even if it was still “budget” oriented but still it was a decent computer considering the price.

    • @Ylyrra
      @Ylyrra Před rokem +1

      @@ian_b The Amstrad worked because it LOOKED like a business machine. Sinclair never figured out that appearances matter more than functionality in consumer electronics (and office electronics too) when it comes to relatively uninformed people making a decision of what to spend their money on. People by and large are hugely risk-adverse when heading into unfamiliar territory, and they'll judge things by the only criteria that they know how to understand: does it look like it does the same job as the thing they want but can't afford, or does it look quirky as all hell?

  • @laser31415
    @laser31415 Před 2 lety +5

    My 1st was a ZX81 and then a TS2068 (still own). I remember reading about the QL and so wanting one. I completely fell for the sales hype. For my income level at the time even that was unobtainium. A few years later I read of the power supply issues etc and was grateful I hadn't spent my money to get one imported. I wonder what we could have gotten if he had set a price target x3.

  • @elbiggus
    @elbiggus Před 2 lety +6

    The Spectrum 128 also had a phone jack (or more accurately, a BS 6312 socket) masquerading as an RS232C, presumably because an actual D-sub connector would have added a few pence to manufacturing costs; my friend tried plugging his into the phone line (we were dumb kids, how were we to know) and the 50V DC promptly killed the machine.
    Also, you *really* should've replaced the disintegrating sponges on the Microdrive wafers - they keep the tape pushed against the head so it probably would have solved the "Quill doesn't boot" problem, but even on the ones that work you're running the risk of sponge dust getting into the mechanism and causing some damage. Ounce of prevention, etc.

  • @Le_Petomane
    @Le_Petomane Před 2 lety +9

    I knew Clive personally a close friend of the family. He was a very complicated man but certainly amazing at times.

    • @6581punk
      @6581punk Před rokem +1

      He was the sort of man who it seems would have loved to have been working in research at universities except he never went and I also think he probably enjoyed having more money than he would have got in a university. In a way he set himself up to be a bit like Xerox Parcs, selling things to fund research and invention.

  • @nuwanamarasingha1982
    @nuwanamarasingha1982 Před 2 měsíci +1

    My Fatha Gunadasa Amarasingha and brother Nalin Amarasingha (Late) has made Sri Lankas first computerized telephone electronic billing systems and satellite dish antena manufacturing calculations using this Amazing Sinclair QL in 1988-1992
    Thank you Sinclair for your Amazing 🖥️ ❤

  • @renecaps-swift2112
    @renecaps-swift2112 Před rokem +1

    Hi Dan,
    Great video!
    It made me playing with a QL again, as I also have the vDrive from Charlie Ingley.
    You mentioned in the video, that you couldn't quite get all the images working from the vDrive.
    I had the same problem, but now sorted.
    What I also didn't do, is use VMAP to assign the vDrive as MDV1 (MAPV2), instead of MDV3.
    What some software does, is starting to boot wherever you load it, but will always look for the software in MDV1.
    So with the external vDrive assigned to MDV1, that problem is gone.
    Cheers, and regards from the Netherlands, René

  • @r0kus
    @r0kus Před 2 lety +8

    Thank you for the interesting and informative video. It's pretty clear Sinclair designed this 1984 machine for 1983 or '84, and by 1985, it was hopelessly outclassed by the Amiga, Atari ST, and IBM XT, and even the Commodore 128. Almost every feature seems designed with compromise in mind.

    • @WarrenPostma
      @WarrenPostma Před 2 lety

      Horrible sound, mediocre graphics, the worst mass storage. No power button. Crappy keyboard. No expandability to speak of. Basically trash.

    • @jd9119
      @jd9119 Před rokem +1

      Compromise is in everything engineered. If you want an affordable computer the average person could afford and considering most people didn't even know they wanted, compromises had to be made. They sold to people who couldn't afford C128s and C64s.

  • @TechRyze
    @TechRyze Před 2 lety +22

    The QL was like a half generation step. It couldn't really compete even with the Atari ST, while it was being positioned as a PC rival.
    It's a bit like the Atari Jaguar. Positioned as a leapfrog of its competition, despite it not being able to even surpass the previous generation in terms of interest.
    The QL STILL didn't even have a decent f'ing keyboard! It's a bit of a joke, trying to sell that to businesses who want a typist to knock out documents quickly from audio tapes.

    • @CommodoreFan64
      @CommodoreFan64 Před 2 lety +6

      Agreed, and that's just part of why IBM, and clones took over in most of the business world, as most of them came with very solid keyboards that would stand up to typist, and their demands. In the 80's 2 of my aunts were court reporters doing courtroom transcripts sometimes for big cases involving murder 1, and no computers could truly keep up with their typing speeds till the IBM 286, and clones came out, and even then they would wear out a keyboard in less than a year, and just buy a new one, instead of trying to repair them, as time was money, but before then with something like an Apple II they were using the whole computer would have been sent off for repair at a local shop just to fix a few worn out keys, which meant more time, and money lost.

    • @another3997
      @another3997 Před 2 lety +4

      Just like today, the 'business' computer of the '80s had a far broader user base than typists. Most small business users didn't use them as typewriter replacements. The IBM PC and subsequent clone market were still in their infancy, and the machines were incredibly expensive, so weren't economically viable for many. It would take several years before the PC became the de-facto platform for business. Amstrad made a killing with their 8 bit PCW business range, running Locoscript and CP/M, selling well in to the '90s because they were cheap and capable of doing what many users needed. With a little bit more thought, the QL could have been a viable solution for many.

    • @TechRyze
      @TechRyze Před 2 lety +5

      A Nother
      Yep - the QL got most things wrong.
      The PCW was damn near a CPC crossed with a typewriter, bundled with a printer. 🖨
      The PCW did loads right, while the QL was a mess.
      DOS & Windows software compatibility became more important as the 80s became the 90s, and CP/M was less central to desktop computing.
      Amstrad managed to sell PCs for unexpectedly low prices.
      They weren't amazing computers, but they were great for business purposes.
      QL wasn't.

    • @beowulfsleeps892
      @beowulfsleeps892 Před 2 lety +2

      Perhaps harsh to compare it with the Atari ST. The Atari ST launched a year later and was more highly specified all around for a similar(?) price. I agree about Sinclair keyboards!
      I was lucky enough to have a BBC Model B that saw me through until I was to start work and purchase an Atari ST for myself. Another part of the business I worked for made the QL and I remember them being sold off but I still couldn't manage the interest to buy one!

    • @TechRyze
      @TechRyze Před 2 lety +3

      @@beowulfsleeps892
      For £399 when they're trying to sell to business and call it a 32-bit computer, while it has limitations that make it more akin to 8-bit in some areas - it's going to get compared to the Atari ST.
      The ST is one of its closest competitor in that market, and people would have bought PCWs, PCs, STs and Amigas instead of this thing.

  • @StarDustSid
    @StarDustSid Před 2 lety +2

    I've got very fond memories of my Sinclair QL.
    I enjoyed this trip down memory lane. Thank you very much.

  • @anderskarlsson9881
    @anderskarlsson9881 Před rokem +2

    I remember the QL very well. A local company where I live manufactured the case and keyboard. They also made the case for the ZX Spectrum, but the QL was supposed to be the really big thing. Lots of money was spent on tooling and equipment for high capacity manufacturing.

  • @SomePeopleCallMeWulfman
    @SomePeopleCallMeWulfman Před 2 lety +21

    I think Sinclair cut way too many corners: Microdrives instead of floppy; Basic instead of a GUI, crappy keyboard, no power switch etc. Pitching it against PC and Mac was also overselling it quite a bit.
    Still loved my QL though!

    • @GeeseH
      @GeeseH Před 2 lety +2

      It wasn't bad at all... However that keyboard 😬

    • @DotArve
      @DotArve Před 2 lety +3

      @@GeeseH Sad thing is that the key profile of the Spectrum+/QL keyboards was really pleasant. The letdown was, as always with Sinclair computers, the worse than horrible membrane keyboards - after the zx80/81, the mechanical changes in the keyboards were basically all putting lipstick on a pig.

    • @SoulPoetryandOtherWorks
      @SoulPoetryandOtherWorks Před 2 lety +3

      SuperBASIC was excellent but a GUI would have been a very useful addition. Microdrives were always a compromise too far for serious use. The keyboard was poor and the use of non-standard connectors for ports limited connecting other peripherals. Those additional feet were an overly cheap solution to a design flaw on a professional machine.
      Still a good machine with 32-bit capabilities.

    • @linuxretrogamer
      @linuxretrogamer Před 2 lety +3

      I think for the time it was releases the SuperBasic was the right call. The microdrives I believe were more reliable than the Speccy ones and something we could've forgiven if the Speccy ones hadn't already given it bad press.
      However the 68008 instead of full 68k, 128k instead of 256k, and unfinished buggy rom supplied as an external cart - where all unforgivable when PCWs, STs, and early cheap PC XT clones existed.

    • @owaing
      @owaing Před 2 lety +1

      @@linuxretrogamer The earliest model Atari ST computers also came with TOS on floppy, because the ROMs weren't finished. This was even worse than shipping as a cartridge, because it took up RAM. You could fix it later by installing ROMs in the empty sockets, though.

  • @GSimpsonOAM
    @GSimpsonOAM Před 2 lety +8

    I had a QL and was my everyday computer for word processing and spreadsheets for 6 years.
    I had no trouble with the microdrives in that time.
    It was a good value computer and did what I wanted at a fraction of the price of a IBM PC compatible.
    I used Win95 & then Win98 but since have used Linux

  • @Zadster
    @Zadster Před 2 lety +12

    I'm surprised there was no mention of the BT/Merlin Tonto or ICL OPD. They sold in relatively good numbers (it is difficult to find hard stats) are based on the QL hardware, and did a pretty good job. They weren't sexy games machines, just an all-in-one desktop+phone that did pretty much what the QL was intended to do from the outset.

    • @MrUxbridge
      @MrUxbridge Před 4 měsíci

      I worked for a company that was working with ICL back in the 80s and what I remember most about the ICL OPD was the fact the the two microdrives always had Sellotape over the top and pencil marks saying "not to be removed for any reason".

  • @leftgrrl
    @leftgrrl Před rokem +1

    As you dig into the design tale of the hardware and firmware it's seems that the QL was a good machine in every aspect that Clive didn't intervene in, but all the bits he cared about he got the call atrociously wrong.
    He wanted the microdrives, which didn't work well until ICL pointed out the value of adding a capacitor over the motor in 1985. After that they were a lot better but their reputation was established and 100,000 or so QLs were out there with duff drives.
    He wanted the flat screen, which never worked but making the circuitry compatable with it meant the graphics didn't display properly on a normal monitor or TV of the time with the left and right of the image falling off the screen. The fixation on launching before the Mac meant that couldn't be corrected when the screen was dropped from the plan.
    His poor business skills meant he negotiated too high a price for the 68008 early on rather than waiting and getting what by the time of the launch would have been a cheaper 68000 chip that would have made for a faster machine - seems he'd preferred the idea of sticking with a Z80.
    Around him he had a team who built SuperBASIC as an extensible, structured BASIC interpreter, and entwined it with QDOS as a pre-emptive multitasking OS with background cache of files on slower devices by default and so forth. The design aesthetic was award winning at the time though Clive went with the membrane rather than proper key switches.
    Whose decision just 128K of RAM was on a machine with 32K needed for video was I can't quite tell, though Apple were making the same obvious mistake just a little way behind Sinclair.
    In short: Clive's hardware, and Sinclair's "look and feel" firmware.
    The heart of a computer is the OS - hence all the Mac vs Windows, iOS vs Android etc - and in that sense it was a great machine, massively let down by the crappy hardware Clive saddled it with. His poor judgement duly brought down the company.

  • @TheStuffMade
    @TheStuffMade Před 2 lety +8

    Nice video, thanks. I remember seeing the QL in magazines and lusting over it, but it was only on the market for like 2 years and then the Amiga 500 came along and I jumped on that instead.

    • @coolvideos8864
      @coolvideos8864 Před 2 lety +4

      I think we were looking to be around at that time, when the Amiga came on the scene it was a revolution.

  • @shaunbebbington6411
    @shaunbebbington6411 Před rokem +5

    I'm pretty certain that the Sinclair QL was the first personal computer that could do pre-emptive multi-tasking. Even better, it could do this from SuperBASIC. The QL is a nice machine to use unless you're a gamer.

  • @amnril
    @amnril Před 2 lety +8

    I still have a Boxed QL, along with a Miracle Systems Super Gold Card which has a 68020 CPU and 4mb RAM. Sadly I sold my double Density ED disc Drives. I also have an Aurora, a hybrid QL/PC which currently houses that Super Gold Card. Quite rare now I suspect.

    • @Sergiovsousa
      @Sergiovsousa Před 2 lety

      I other words, if you´re not a computer colector, I can get a pretty sum for that...

    • @petermcilroy1176
      @petermcilroy1176 Před 2 lety +1

      You actually have a Gold Card? I could only afford an ordinary 896k expansion (I can’t remember who made it) and also upgraded the ROM to the Minerva ROM

    • @amnril
      @amnril Před 2 lety +1

      @@petermcilroy1176 yes, at one point I had a gold card and two super gold cards. I sold the GC and one SGC but have kept the other. I haven’t used it in years, it’s currently installed in the Aurora and is sitting in the loft.

  • @alanguile8945
    @alanguile8945 Před 2 lety +9

    I bought one and loaded up 3D Chess. Wow hadn't seen anything like it before on something I could afford! Took it in to work, set it up in the lab and lost to everyone! Those micro drives though🤣.Just listened to the interview, Sony actually showed Clive their new invention the 31/2 floppy! What a difference that would have made!

    • @danyoutube7491
      @danyoutube7491 Před 7 měsíci +1

      When Nigel Searle was speaking @2:56 he mentions that Clive Sinclair was aware that the business market he was targeting were prepared to pay a high price as long as the product didn't include compromises, and my first thought was those microdrives. A shame, but he did know of course that 5.25" floppy drives existed. They were of a higher quality than the microdrives in every way, and something that was established and familiar to businesses, so the microdrive was a really poor choice even if the 3.5" was not on his radar during development of the QL.

  • @PrivateSi
    @PrivateSi Před 2 lety +1

    QL Users and the QL media never called Microdrive Cartridges 'wafers'.... Wafers were an abandoned, permanently powered Ram Disk module designed to compete with the crappy hard drives of the day, with much, much greater speed at the expense of memory robustness (contents lost when power to the drive is turned off (they were powered separately to the computer, obviously)...
    --
    Called 'Wafer Drives' as they used an entire, discarded memory chip die wafer with 100s of memory chip dies on each wafer thin disk (still used in fabs today)... Problem is, the chip industry found ways around the fact an entire wafer had to be discarded if a few faulty dies were found. Sinclair lost their source of cheap discarded memory chip wafers... Consumers benefited from cheaper memory though.
    --
    The only way The UK / Europe could have mixed it with the US Cabal (sorry, US PC Giants) was to agree on a standard MULTI CPU bus architecture (like the BBC Micro had), and for all UK / Europe computer designers to (BE FORCED to !?) adopt it... Had to Z80, 6502, 68000 but NOT X86 (initially, for at least 2 years). This would have given the UK / Europe much leverage over the 3 main rivals to Intel, which would have been great for our PC makers.. Standard IO and peripheral interfaces... A NON-MONOPOLISTIC COMPETITOR to the IBM PC standard..
    --
    The QL should have adopted this standard, but disregarding it for now, it should have been SPECTRUM COMPATIBLE at the very least.. Z80 + 68008 with a slightly better graphics chip to handle ZX and FULL QL modes ++.. QDOS never fully supported the graphics chip it had. 32kb of graphic memory was used by the OS as a corner cutting measure. 64kb can be used and after the QL was discontinued 'Dithvide' shows, giving many more colours.
    --
    Can switch between 512x256 4 colour and 256x256 8 colour each screen frame as well as stay in the same mode and show a different colourised version every other frame, mixing the two frames colours to the viewers eyes... Colour interlacing does not produce flicker (resolution interlacing does)...
    --
    QL should have had a bolt on, matching SEPARATE DRIVE UNIT (Tape, Disk or 2x Microdrive at various price points), + extra memory available on board from the start, no expansion card needed (there's a lot of empty space inside the QL case., could have easily provided up to 32 chip sockets if the mobo was as big as the case - or 8 memory chip sockets and 2 co-processor sockets, in my IBM beating Euro-PC standard that never was..)..

  • @bobcarn
    @bobcarn Před 2 lety +3

    I never knew of this system. My first computer was the Timex Sinclair 1000. I bought it to just play around with because I liked electronics and I could finally get a real computer (more or less). I worked in a department store at the time selling electronics and was previously a janitor and laborer. I learned from the Sinclair that I was naturally good with computers, upgraded to a PC, and eventually made IT my career. Sinclair jump-started what became a passion and livelihood. I'm sorry I never got to play around with this device. Once I moved to the PC, I stayed with that platform. I think I'll hook up my old Timex Sinclair and see if it's still working.

    • @gertsy2000
      @gertsy2000 Před rokem

      Your experience was the same for so many people.

  • @iggysfriend4431
    @iggysfriend4431 Před 2 lety +2

    The QL was a fine machine of it's time but the Micro drives were dire, like a warmed over mini 8-track player. They should have stick a 3.5" floppy drive in it.

  • @RussellBaker
    @RussellBaker Před 2 lety +3

    Used a Merlin Tonto for five years back in the day, basically a phone with a QL, at the time a brilliant desk phone complete with an internal modem and handling two phone lines, years ahead of its time, and I don't think there's a desk phone that still matches it now

  • @jacquesmertens3369
    @jacquesmertens3369 Před 2 lety +2

    The first batch had faulty microdrives. By the time it became clear how bad the situation was, it was too late to save QL's reputation. I'm one of many who picked up a QL at less than half the recommended price. The machine was worse than a ZX Spectrum for gaming, and much worse than a pc for serious tasks. The Marketing Dept. got it totally wrong, and it wrecked the company. Surely the microdrives did play an important role in the downfall of the QL, but even with good microdrives the machine was destined to fail.
    I did enjoy the manual a lot.

  • @ChrisHopkinsBass
    @ChrisHopkinsBass Před 2 lety +3

    I’m loving the Plus/4 datasette and the god awful Plus/4 Joystick on display during the unboxing. My first system was a Plus/4 I got as a present at Christmas 1985! Happy days!

  • @coolvideos8864
    @coolvideos8864 Před 2 lety +1

    Why dont you have over 500k subs yet? Your video's are always entertaining and well produced.

  • @petermcilroy1176
    @petermcilroy1176 Před 2 lety +1

    I bought a QL to replace my speccy. I only used it for a few years before the Amiga bug got me. I was a member of the QL Users and Tinkerers Association and that is where my hatred of all things PC was born

  • @richardmoore4194
    @richardmoore4194 Před 2 lety +3

    I used QL's to teach a load of young people and the integrated software suite hit the nail/ I still have several microdrives :)

  • @gogee8510
    @gogee8510 Před měsícem

    Love the video. My first computer was the ZX81, then the ZX Spectrum. Then I bought the Sinclair QL for £399, when it was first launched. This was just a beautiful-looking machine, and in a way, a bit ahead of of' it's time. Love that big manual which it came with (don't see that anymore). Such great memories. Thankyou for this historical video.

  • @darkpoethd9913
    @darkpoethd9913 Před 7 měsíci

    I remember standing in front of a Q L in Wh Smith in Manchester Arndale.
    I was only 21 and felt in awe as I touched the keyboard of the display unit... Crazy

  • @Andrew_dot_pls
    @Andrew_dot_pls Před 10 měsíci

    I had one of the first QLs (having been a Spectrum user since I was 14 years old). Microdrives failed after a week so it went back and i got a different version that worked well for a couple weeks then the drives failed again and I got another one. Once again the drives failed me and I gave up.
    The strange thing was, I never had an issue with microdrives on my Spectrum. Worked flawlessly.
    The 68008 was a big mistake (I assume to cut costs). 8 bit address bus meant it was about half the speed of a 68000. I think the 68008 was mainly used in washing machines and suchlike.
    Why that decision was made I'll never know especially since the price of the QL was reduced so quickly.
    I can remember being able to program with 32 bit instructions (internally) but then everything communicated with RAM at 8 bits. Like what was the point of that?

  • @charlesjmouse
    @charlesjmouse Před 2 lety +4

    FWVILIW: With the benefit of hindsight one wonders is the C5 might has been more successful as a scooter, although those are illegal on UK roads and the whole idea might simply have been before it's time.* (suitable batteries?) The QL? Not a bad machine, once customers actually got production models! But I think Sir Clive misread the market when speccing it, compounded by the QL being horribly outclassed in comparison to other 68k machines that were appearing.
    *I have very mixed feelings about electric scooters:
    On the one hand mine is my main transport when I'm in Greece - I live on a Greek island part of the year.
    On the other hand the purveyors of e-waste who claim to hire the darn things really should be banned worldwide, and far too many e-scooter owners are dangerous and inconsiderate twats. Maybe the UK is better off continuing to make their use illegal?

  • @PascalGienger
    @PascalGienger Před rokem

    The microdrives had pretty much the same problems as the 8 track cartridges. Pinchroller, pressing pad (pressing the tape on the head) and the tape lubrification (as the windings move between each other on a single spool) as well as tape deterioration and thinning the tape due to the use.
    As the tape width is super small it's a mess to respool the tape after relubifrication.
    I got a QL "Business Suite" tape running after two hours of work.

  • @retrogametherapy
    @retrogametherapy Před 7 měsíci

    always wanted to add one of these to my collection! what a beautiful example you have there Dan

  • @richardtwyning
    @richardtwyning Před 2 lety +1

    I'm a hardcore Texas Instruments fan. I had, and still support the TI-99/4A. Good again to see a machine full of Texas Instruments chips. In this case all the TMS4164 RAM chips 🙂

    • @greggv8
      @greggv8 Před 2 lety +1

      Have you seen the Don't Mess With Texas 99-4/A demo?

    • @richardtwyning
      @richardtwyning Před 2 lety

      @@greggv8 I don't think I have, but I'll have a look for that, thank you 👍🏻

  • @Blackadder75
    @Blackadder75 Před 2 lety +3

    Sinclair QL - Was It Really THAT Bad? "It was a piece of crap, frankly...." Linus Torvalds, 2001 in a speech on the origins of Linux.
    Let's thank Sinclair that it was so bad, because it made Linus write all his own programs, a habit which would eventually lead to writing his own operating system, arguably the best in the world.

  • @claycassin8437
    @claycassin8437 Před 2 lety +2

    Was it really that bad? I sure thought so at the time. It was shoddy cheap plastic, just like everything Sinclair made was. I was the proud owner of a Sinclair digital watch...for a few months, anyway. I played around with a QL in a store for just the few moments it took me to think "Uh, hell no". I had already sampled their products, and found them wanting.

  • @nidjcopi
    @nidjcopi Před 2 lety

    In the Late 80's early 90's the office I worked from had an ICL OPD (one per desk) which was nothing more than a re-packaged QL built into a monitor, it was used for word processing and producing weekly/monthly figures and graphs for our department. The microdrives I were reliable but were slow at reading programes so I amended a spectrum trick that allowed multiple copies to be written to the cartridge so that you didn't have to wait until it went to the beginning of the tape to start to load, The OPD was still in use when I left in 96.A service manual for the QL in pdf is (was) available online as I had to reapair one in 2000.

    • @leftgrrl
      @leftgrrl Před rokem

      ICL had spent a lot of money finding out how to fix microdrives so they worked properly before manufacturing the OPD - hence the later production runs of QLs had much better drives (I think D17 / D18 designations on the underside from memory?)

  • @elektron2kim666
    @elektron2kim666 Před 2 lety +2

    Was interested in it and ended up with handheld devices. Psion 3, 3c and 3mx became my ZX-Spectrum replacement(s) later on and I skipped some with what I had to do in real life.

  • @eskey691
    @eskey691 Před 2 lety

    Was that a C16 tape deck i seen in this video, was more a commodore fan boy but i did enjoy a game or 2 on the ZX Spectrum back in the day. Great stuff as always.

  • @nightbeast8105
    @nightbeast8105 Před 2 lety +4

    Sir Clive in chasing the electric car dream. Was basically blinded to the fact he'd inadvertently created the first mobility scooter and just failed to realise it. Look at that market today, its a Mint.

  • @martinh4982
    @martinh4982 Před 2 lety +17

    "The QL doesn't have a delete key". Yeah, that pretty much sums it up. A very interesting episode in computing history, though.

    • @Sergiovsousa
      @Sergiovsousa Před 2 lety

      Just like the C64GS console didn´t have a keyboard to start the T2 release game...

    • @edism
      @edism Před 2 lety +1

      Neither does an Apple Mac

    • @RasVoja
      @RasVoja Před 2 lety

      On no delete key - yes. But functionality is there:
      CTRL & arrow left - Delete the character to the left of the cursor
      CTRL & arrow down - Delete the character under the cursor
      etc. You can also delete lines and even words. So reading manual is essential.
      e.g.
      SHIFT & CTRL & left - Delete the word to the left of the cursor
      SHIFT & CTRL & right - Delete the word to the right of the cursor

  • @cliffcook3993
    @cliffcook3993 Před 2 lety +2

    The QL was also rebadged by ICL as The One Per Desk units (OPD) and was used in bulk by the original incarcation of the National Bingo Game so there was one in every Bingo Hall in the Country that took part in this game,.

  • @Lorfarius
    @Lorfarius Před 2 lety +5

    Nice, clear and concise. Had no idea it even had games so def tempted to have a look at one now.

    • @TheRealWindlePoons
      @TheRealWindlePoons Před 2 lety

      I am confident you will be disappointed. If you want game nostalgia from that era and genuine antique hardware you would do much better with a ZX Spectrum or BBC Micro. The games I had for my QL were no better than those for the Acorn Atom (the BBC's predecessor).

  • @silverstreettalks343
    @silverstreettalks343 Před 2 lety +6

    Microdrives were one of the things that turned me off the Spectrum when I was first thinking about computers. Even before rumours of their unreliability started emerging, they struck me as a clever but limited idea.
    Eventually, though, the need for DTP software combined with a limited budget directed me toward PCs

    • @jezz2k
      @jezz2k Před 2 lety +1

      Between 1983 and 1991 I owned a 48K and later a +3. I recall seeing adverts in Sinclair User for microdrives but wasn't interested in getting them, and they didn't come included with the Spectrum, so I don't see how they would have put you off buying a Speccy. The overwhelmingly vast majority of software was on tape and some on 3" disks for the +3.

    • @jezz2k
      @jezz2k Před rokem

      @De Rekarts After the two Spectrums I owned, I upgraded to an Amiga 500 and later an A1200 and fitted a hard drive. Made the switch to PCs in 1996. The point I was trying to make is that Spectrums didn't come with a microdrive as standard. They were very rare indeed. I never saw one outside of the magazine adverts. So why would they turn you off from buying one?

    • @jezz2k
      @jezz2k Před rokem

      @De Rekarts Yep. If he meant QLs, that would make more sense. Considering the topic of this video however, and how the QL was marketed, its a bit difficult to confuse the two.

  • @ghenghiskhan9473
    @ghenghiskhan9473 Před 2 lety

    where did you order the V drive from?

  • @EndsBowen
    @EndsBowen Před 2 lety +2

    I had QL and loved it. It was before its time and the micro drives was a missstep for this product. But It was my fave of the Sinclair I had

  • @ActionRetro
    @ActionRetro Před 2 lety +3

    I always thought this computer looked so cool

  • @onlineamiga
    @onlineamiga Před 2 lety +3

    I would love to get one of these, as well as a Sam Coupe. That would be a good video. I'm sure the Sam Coupe was supposed to be the successor of the Spectrum. Even some of the speccy mags put some games on their covertapes for it too.

    • @iantellam9970
      @iantellam9970 Před 2 lety +3

      I still have my SAM Coupe under my bed. Haven't turned it on in about 10 years though. It launched far too late to be competitive, but it was a great system for learning BASIC on and learning about computing in general - unlike the 16 bit machines it booted into BASIC like the older 8 bit micros. That and the fact that it played Spectrum games meant I got more mileage out of it than its short lifespan and weak software support would suggest. Even the QL couldn't play Spectrum games.

  • @apx5777
    @apx5777 Před rokem

    At 19:36 interesting maze runner type game but am I wrong in thinking 3d monster maze on zx81 was better?

  • @Jimyjames73
    @Jimyjames73 Před 2 lety

    Hiya - I always wanted the C5!!! My late Dad bought the QL. It had the Microdrive's & Cartridges - which I also used with my Sinclair ZX Spuctrum + 🙂🚂🚂🚂

  • @linuxretrogamer
    @linuxretrogamer Před 2 lety +13

    I've looked over the QL a few times (never a real physical model, alas) and there's alot to commend with the QL. Alas there's also infamously a few things that was sonewhat misguided. It failed for good reasons, budget being one. Couple of minor changes and it'd be an amazing bit of kit.

    • @DailyCorvid
      @DailyCorvid Před 2 lety

      I think the QL is pretty amazing! Even though it never took off, as a collector I would kill to get my hands on one now but even at the time when I was a kid - I would have gone fairly far maybe manslaughter lol. The other one I like but can't find is the Atari 1200XL or the 600 with expanded RAM. Wicked little machines, pure joy if you manage to find one!
      I'd probably start a CZcams channel just for videos about them. Lol. No murdering or slaughter of any kind, it's for education XDDDD

    • @joefish6091
      @joefish6091 Před 2 lety +2

      @@DailyCorvid Amiga 500 did everything way better. not much more expensive.
      Sinclair had to make the QL look the same as the toy Spectrums to encourage brand loyalty, but yhat told everybodyou else that QL was just an overpriced toy.
      Lack of backward compatibilty to the Spectrum hindered peoples upgrade to the QL, they should have put a Z80 cpu inside too.

    • @joefish6091
      @joefish6091 Před 2 lety

      @@DailyCorvid Buy an Oric and scream at how nasty they are were.
      Teletext GPU only graphics that were 10 tens years obselete in the mid 80s..

    • @p0k314COM
      @p0k314COM Před 2 lety

      Sinclar like many other brands from 60-70' eg RCA or Atari did not understand how market changed in 80 and especially 90. Users asked about quality, and received cheap obsolete products. And oldies died. Fast. And literally no one care about it.

  • @SharpblueCreative
    @SharpblueCreative Před rokem

    I was given a whole load of Sinclair computers. Including 5 spectrums, 3 QL’s with micro cassettes and a few Spectrum 128’s. I had no use for most so they were donated to a computer museum in Swindon. I’ve kept a few mostly for display as they don’t appear to work well. May have to re visit these.

  • @richbuilds_com
    @richbuilds_com Před 3 měsíci

    I had a QL. I wrote a few business packages for private companies back in the day for it, along with some encryption stuff. It was the last "home computer" I coded for before I moved onto PC's and eventually big back end systems.

  • @DrewSwenson
    @DrewSwenson Před 2 lety +3

    Thanks to Micro-Men, whenever I think of Sir Clive... I immediately think of "Jet Set fucking Willy!"

  • @scottmarsden1643
    @scottmarsden1643 Před 2 lety +2

    Wow true walk down memory lane for me. I still have 2 machines one with a memory add on and yeah it falls out all the time lol. I used to play Tank Busters for hours.. mainly as that was all I had till I learned to mess with Touch Typing then I had access to space invaders as the ‘Reward’ lol

  • @RasVoja
    @RasVoja Před 2 lety +1

    On no delete key - yes. But functionality is there:
    CTRL & arrow left - Delete the character to the left of the cursor
    CTRL & arrow down - Delete the character under the cursor
    etc. You can also delete lines and even words. So reading manual is essential.
    e.g.
    SHIFT & CTRL & left - Delete the word to the left of the cursor
    SHIFT & CTRL & right - Delete the word to the right of the cursor

    • @deanolium
      @deanolium Před rokem +1

      This feels insane though. They wanted to sell this to businesses, who presumably saw word processing as a major task. A thing which requires quick and easy editing, so delete would be used a lot. Hiding the functionality under key combos, at a time when a lot of adults didn't fully understand computers and were heavily used to typewriters, just seems like madness. No reason whatsoever to not have a delete button.

    • @RasVoja
      @RasVoja Před rokem +1

      @@deanolium Its ctrl plus cursor, and can do a lot more then delete. Mind that in 1984 things were not so standardized. There is no key, but functionality is there

    • @deanolium
      @deanolium Před rokem

      @@RasVojaBut would someone who has spent ten to twenty years typing on a standard typewriter know to do this combination naturally? This is part of the reasons why PCs caught on in business (which used a very standard layout that was easy to understand) whilst Clive Sinclair produced a series of failed products, only really succeeding with the Spectrum out of luck than anything else.

    • @RasVoja
      @RasVoja Před rokem +1

      @@deanolium Ask Sinclair and Clive, they refused HQ keyboard to cut corners

    • @RasVoja
      @RasVoja Před 4 měsíci +1

      @@deanolium Mind that standard typewriters don't have delete function at all, if it became at least UK bussiness standard it would be well known and appreciated :D

  • @fradd182
    @fradd182 Před 2 lety +10

    Unfortunately, 32kB of frame-buffer was too much for QL, if there is any fast action game for it, with smooth scrolling and some sprites, it struggles probably more than CPC. Even ST has a problem with 32kB, and it was a powerhouse compared to QL.

    • @oisnowy5368
      @oisnowy5368 Před 2 lety +4

      Which is why the Archimedes is the most underrated. It did fast action games in 256 colors with 80kB screen modes fluidly. It was insane how much faster it was. And it had normal drives.

    • @thehighprotondiet3127
      @thehighprotondiet3127 Před 2 lety +2

      @@oisnowy5368 The Archimedes was a BEAST in its time - two or three times more powerful in software than even the Amiga with all its hardware. It failed mostly because the games companies didn't see Archimedes games as a viable market and nobody bought them without any games. Catch-22.

    • @RasVoja
      @RasVoja Před 2 lety +2

      Plus that 32KB is taken from 128K, leaving just 90K for user. Then 100K storage media looks proper :(

    • @leftgrrl
      @leftgrrl Před rokem

      @@oisnowy5368 the Archi had much better hardware, but then it was 3.5 years later - at a time when the tech innovation was moving pretty fast. If Sinclair had weathered the computer sales slump of 84/85 I guess there would have been a QL/2 in 86 and a QL/3 about the time of the first Archimedes to compare like with like.

  • @michaelturner4457
    @michaelturner4457 Před rokem +3

    I'm sure it was the microdrives and the keyboard that did in for the QL as a serious business computer. I remember in 1985 when the QL was being activaly marketed, I worked for a small firm that was looking for its first computers, and they bought a couple of Amstrad PCW256s in the end. And those had a good keyboard, used floppies, and had a monitor and a printer as part of the package. Which the QL didn't.

    • @Ozymandias1
      @Ozymandias1 Před rokem +1

      It was called the Schneider Joyce in Germany and here in the Netherlands. A very popular product with small businesses which couldn’t afford a PC (even the clones were very expensive).

  • @dustojnikhummer
    @dustojnikhummer Před 2 lety +2

    What I find interesting that despite it being a British machine, it uses pretty much a bog standard US ANSI layout. Even @ is on 2, which is where Pound is on modern UK keyboards (I'm not british btw)

    • @Ylyrra
      @Ylyrra Před rokem

      Close, but UK "standard" layout has double quotes on 2 and @ where double quotes are on US keyboards. Pound-sterling sign is on 3 where the hash/pound-weight sign is. (Hash usually moves to where backslash is under the right pinky midrow and backslash moves to bottom left pinky left of Z where backtick usually is, and backtick moves up to left-of-1 where tilde ~ is usually, which moves to shift pound sign. Pipe/vertical bar then swaps back up to the tilde key as alt-mode/supershift/whatever to finally stop the ridiculous game of musical chairs.)
      Apple of course does something different.

  • @NeonEUC
    @NeonEUC Před 2 lety +3

    Once again, another video to download and watch later with plenty of beer and no ads. Tell ravi to also get he's arse in gear and do more videos the lazy little sod 🤪

    • @Djformula
      @Djformula Před 2 lety +2

      Haha working on a big one at the moment, Amiga Gateway 2000 history.

    • @NeonEUC
      @NeonEUC Před 2 lety +1

      @@Djformula you little beauty 😍 can't wait to see this one. Any idea how long the video will be ? At least 30 mins for something that good 😊👍

  • @V3ntilator
    @V3ntilator Před 2 lety +1

    The problem is that there were so many home computers back then and Commodore 64 among others were market leader.
    Also. AMIGA came in 1985. Commodore 128D also failed even with 3 computers in one as Amiga had way more power.

  • @matthiasbreiter4177
    @matthiasbreiter4177 Před 8 měsíci +1

    I think with a more honest timeline and better quality control the QL would have been a solid computer for its time. It ticked all the boxes (like 80+ column mode in colors, RS 232 serial). However I think Dan you're right - Business people would have payed anything. I would add "as long as IBM is written on the box" ;) Anyway, being the "cheapest" wasn't a factor for business customers. To my knowledge, a lot of QL users first got a disk drive + controller. So much for the microdrive.
    I think, a lot like Commodore, accepting that you aren't the business company, could have done a lot for Sinclair.

  • @merlin5476
    @merlin5476 Před rokem

    I miss my 48k spectrum and the " Crash" magazine... loved to spend hours typing in all the code with friends, only to say " IS THAT IT!!! ( after saving it).
    Chaos by julien Gollop is still played today ( pc version).

  • @PeterCooperUK
    @PeterCooperUK Před 2 lety

    What's the maze game at 19:24? I've tried doing some Googling but can't find it. I haven't seen it in 30+ years but it seems very familiar. I never had a QL so maybe it was ported on to something else.
    Edit: For anyone else's benefit.. I eventually Googled "spectrum maze sword game" and it's Maziacs, I think, although the name isn't familiar to me.

  • @peterhurn4045
    @peterhurn4045 Před 2 lety +1

    Having had a Spectrum 16K upgraded later to 48K, I saved up to buy a Sinclair QL, I later worked for the shop where I purchased the QL from and this led to a life in IT, in various roles. I never purchased the QL thinking it was a games machine.

    • @fiat500enthusiasts
      @fiat500enthusiasts Před 2 lety +2

      Me too. The excellent version of Basic that was built-in was the major attraction for me, much better than BBC Basic.

    • @RasVoja
      @RasVoja Před 2 lety +1

      @@fiat500enthusiasts How super SuperBASIC was compared to e.g. ZX Spectrum BASIC or Commodore 64 BASIC was? :)

  • @MentatOfDune
    @MentatOfDune Před 2 lety +5

    Never knew the QL was a thing. Never remember seeing one here in Ireland. It was all ZX's and C64's before friends jumped to consoles (though I remember 1 friend had an Amstrad).

  • @samcadwallader2899
    @samcadwallader2899 Před 2 lety +3

    I remember going to my local computer shop when it launched. My take on the QL was that the BBC B covered the serious user with it's massive expansion capability and this was far too lightweight in terms of it's hardware quality and software library. That said I reckon SINCLAIR could have had similar success as the Spectrum if they had made a gaming machine of the QL as the reliability of the microdrive woudn't have mattered to people who were just playing games.

    • @leftgrrl
      @leftgrrl Před rokem

      They'd have had to make the cartridges a lot cheaper than the £5-a-time for a blank one though.

  • @LordRenegrade
    @LordRenegrade Před 2 lety

    I wouldn't worry about parts being 'proprietary'. Everything was, back in those days ;) . Most of the 'standards' were just companies ripping off other companies' designs (which would get them sued out of existence today), like PC clones ripping off the PC-AT 5170 design, or Atari's DE-9 joystick ports, or IBM"s PS/2 ports, etc. Later on, some of these things were retroactively written into standards, but they didn't start out that way.
    There was only a handful of actual standardized parts:
    - the IEC 60320 C14 and NEMA 5-15-P power cable that PCs (and some other machines) used...er, plus regional variants of the mains end of the cable.
    - RS-232/422 ports.
    - The parallel port - er no wait that wasn't actually a proper standard until later.
    - The parallel version of IEEE 488 (yes, the CBM PET drives used a cable that was from the 60s and standardized in '75).

  • @ArcadeMusicTribute
    @ArcadeMusicTribute Před 2 lety +1

    I really prefer this style of keyboard to the classic rubber buttons on the ZX Spectrum. I had a ZX Spectrum 48k + back in the day, that was basically the same as Zx Spectrum but with this kind of keyboard. I liked it better than the rubber classic ZX :D The 128k had this style keyboard also :v

  • @leftgrrl
    @leftgrrl Před rokem +2

    Flippant thought: did the name also kill it? Imagine its marketing as the "Sinclair One Per Desk", a much more office sounding brandname that worked for the ICL variant and would have helped more clearly distance it from the two-letter ZX styling of the 80/81/Spectrum.

    • @Ylyrra
      @Ylyrra Před rokem

      At the time PCs were marketed as XTs and ATs, so it wasn't seen as less serious because of that.

  • @philogden8204
    @philogden8204 Před 24 dny

    I think that there's a thing about the QL that slips under every retrospective reviewer's radar which is that it inherently multitasked, we're so used to multitasking these days that we don't really think about a time when that wasn't the norm. I remember writing a very simplistic bouncing ball program where each ball was just an instance of the same code with just the location and direction data being unique to each instance and the scheduler managing all the instances fairly transparently - you just couldn't do that on anything else at the time (well, not on anything that was within the financial means of a home user).

  • @TheTurnipKing
    @TheTurnipKing Před 2 lety +1

    I mean. No, but also yes. It was so demonstrably NOT what any segment of the market wanted, but taken on it's own merit, it's actually quite an interesting machine.

  • @andrewjenery1783
    @andrewjenery1783 Před 2 lety +1

    Amazing machine for its time which I nearly bought, but the lack of a 3.5" floppy drive and monitor put me off.

  • @pdtech4524
    @pdtech4524 Před rokem +1

    I skipped the Sinclair QL but felt it had potential and I maybe missed out?
    It seemed to be aimed more at the small business user for doing accounts, spreadsheets and other 'office' type apps.
    I went from the spectrum 48k used as a games and programming machine and made the same jump as many others to the Amiga 500.
    The 16 bit games with far superior graphics and sound was a huge step up from the spectrum.
    I did look at the Atari ST but that seemed to be geared more for musicians, the PC was way too expensive and the 3.1 windows system seemed very primitive compared to the Amiga operating system.
    It was a no brainer....eventually I jumped over to the PC as prices came down and windows 95 came out.
    I would have stuck with the Amiga platform but commodore dragged their heels with developing the system or competing with the PC, the Amiga 600 and 1200 fell short of my next jump....

  • @SpeccyMan
    @SpeccyMan Před 2 lety +3

    I winced every time you used the word wafer. They were cartridges to those of us who used them. The Rotronics Wafadrive was a completely different and competing system.

    • @DavidHembrow
      @DavidHembrow Před 2 lety

      Me too. No-one ever called microdrives "wafers". They were always called cartridges.

    • @TheRealWindlePoons
      @TheRealWindlePoons Před 2 lety

      @@DavidHembrow Wafers weren't microdrives. Wavers were silicon memory and though promised never materialised for the QL. Microdrive cartridges just contained a loop of magnetic tape.

    • @DavidHembrow
      @DavidHembrow Před 2 lety

      @@TheRealWindlePoons there were two things called wafers. First the waferdrive released by a third party for the spectrum which was a microdrive competitor using similar cartridges with a loop of tape. Those were called wafers. Then there was Ivor Catt's wafer scale integration which Sinclair was at some point supposed to sell as an accessory for the QL. A neat idea which never made it as a product.

    • @TheRealWindlePoons
      @TheRealWindlePoons Před 2 lety

      @@DavidHembrow Yes, you are absolutely correct. Sorry I wasn't more specific in outlining my context of referencing a QL-specific Sinclair product.

  • @jameslewis2635
    @jameslewis2635 Před 2 lety +10

    Sorry to be a downer but the QL was a textbook exercise in misunderstanding your customer base. At the time Sinclair was known as a manufacturer of hobbyist and gaming machines. As such any prospects of launching a product aimed at businesses was bound to be an up hill struggle from a marketing perspective alone. Add to that the low end specifications which hugely limits what this machine can be used for along with an unreliable storage medium (aimed at business customers for whom reliability is extremely important) and you have as near to a guaranteed flop as possible without releasing a product that simply doesn't work.

    • @drramtop1576
      @drramtop1576 Před 2 lety +1

      I remember seeing a QL in the local computer shop, back in the day. I owned a Spectrum+ at the time and was *really* interested in a 16-bit Sinclair system, right up till I saw it in the flesh and came away severely unimpressed by the poor graphics, horrible sound and the already meme-worthy Microdrives. There was nothing about that machine that tempted me at all. Even for 'serious' use, I recall thinking at the time that a BBC Micro with some extra RAM would have been a better buy.
      It's a real shame that Sinclair didn't target the QL as a Spectrum successor. If they'd given it at least 16 colours, a reasonable sound chip and a floppy drive it would probably have done quite well, even given the higher cost.

    • @ru55ells
      @ru55ells Před rokem

      Err Apple made hobbyist computers early on.
      Sinclair gained success through cutting the cost. Perhaps too many corners cut in this case however the idea of undercutting the cost of a PC in 1984 from 3 grand to 400 quid was a noble cause.

    • @error4159
      @error4159 Před rokem

      The QL wasn't a misunderstanding of the customer base, it was an intentional ignoring of the customer base. Clive wanted make serious computers for serious users and the QL was designed for those users. The problem for Sinclair was, those users didn't exist.

  • @kensukadventures628
    @kensukadventures628 Před rokem

    Really wanted one as a kid. Used to look at them upstairs in whsmiths, checking the keyboard for loose keys.

  • @carbonara2144
    @carbonara2144 Před 2 lety +3

    I was very much interested in QL when it was launched. Too bad it didnt work out for Sinclair. Very promising platform it was.

  • @danielt.8573
    @danielt.8573 Před 2 lety +1

    If only Clive Sinclair's C5 didn't look like a toy tricycle.
    Had he made it the size of a Mini - a proper micro car - or something like the Enfield 8000 with lighter materials, better design and easy to build/assemble he could've sold millions.