An American perspective on the late great Sir Clive Sinclair, from Fast Company

George Rachor george.rachor at gmail.com
Mon Sep 27 15:52:30 CDT 2021


I remember in college we raised some money and bought 10 in kit form.  It went so well that 2 weeks later we ordered 10 more kits.  We were astonished to find the second order of 10 already assembled and tested.

Cool stuff…

George Rachor



> On Sep 27, 2021, at 1:49 PM, Fred Cisin via cctalk <cctalk at classiccmp.org> wrote:
> 
>> My girlfriend commented to me that Americans don't understand London"s Fleet Street scene of the 70's and early 80s and how Sinclair products were represented there.  In the US the "Timex Sinclair TS-1000" was a budget $99 computer for sale in Hallmark gift stores and its marketing represented little of the fleet Street cache.
> 
> They rarely even made it into stores.  They were more of a magazine ad for "Real computer for $49.95"  (which was about 25 pounds at the time)
> If they made it into stores, they might have ended up hanging on a peg next to a blister pack of half a dozen rubber wedge doorstops.
> 
> 
> I think that it is truly tragic about the price gouging.
> A number of people have commented that computers were sold as if the exchange rate was 1:1!  A computer that sold for $1000 would be sold in UK for 1000 GBP! (the equivalent of $3000) As soon as they came out, I bought a TRS80 for $400 (it would have been $600 if I didn't already have a CCTV composite monitor and a tape recorder).  How much did the TRS80 sell for in UK?
> 
> So, in USA, you had arguments between $600 TRS80 and $600 Commodore PET, with the wealthier kids buying Apple.
> 
> When the IBM PC (5150) came out in August 1981, it was less that $2000, if you supplied your own RAM, floppy drives, and monitor.  (~$1300 + CGA + FDC)
> 
> They were in the price range of a cheap used car.
> 
> 
> --
> Grumpy Ol' Fred     		cisin at xenosoft.com



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