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So Clive Sinclair has passed away

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  • #16
    Re: So Clive Sinclair has passed away

    Originally posted by Taunton Blue Genie View Post
    The C5 never quite caught on.....
    I wonder what the world would think now, a small personal electric car, takes up little space to park, cheap to buy, cheap to run, cheap to maintain, whack a Tesla badge on it, its a winner

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    • #17
      Re: So Clive Sinclair has passed away

      Originally posted by blue matt View Post
      I wonder what the world would think now, a small personal electric car, takes up little space to park, cheap to buy, cheap to run, cheap to maintain, whack a Tesla badge on it, its a winner
      With modern brushless motors and battery technology, I'd love to see what you could do with the concept these days

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      • #18
        Re: So Clive Sinclair has passed away

        Originally posted by Rjk View Post
        With modern brushless motors and battery technology, I'd love to see what you could do with the concept these days

        Get squashed by a juggernaut lorry most probably

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        • #19
          Re: So Clive Sinclair has passed away

          Originally posted by BLUETIT View Post
          Get squashed by a juggernaut lorry most probably
          Yeah, but you could have a lot of fun before your inevitable demise.
          could make it like a drifting trike/big wheel

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          • #20
            Re: So Clive Sinclair has passed away

            Originally posted by stan butler View Post
            He was ahead of his time with the C5
            Way ahead.
            Computers too.
            He was the one who suggested everybody having a computer.
            Just think if he hadn't been born, very few people world be working from home now.

            I remember him being publicly ridiculed, for his C5.

            He's gotta be up there with the great innovative pioneers.

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            • #21
              Re: So Clive Sinclair has passed away

              Originally posted by blue matt View Post
              I must admit, the ZX81 then the Spectrum were my first Computers and set me of down the geek road

              I guess it was the start of " backing up games " aswell

              Who can forget

              Football manager
              Daley Thompsom Decathlon, batter those keys
              Outrun ( which at that time was vastly better on the mega drive )
              Italia 90 ( as outrun, the mega drive was just killing home computer games by then )
              OutRun is still up there as one of the most influential driving games of all time. I think it made 4th just behind Gran Turismo. I've seen elements of outrun recycled in games like Need For Speed and even the Forza Horizon series. It's non-linear gameplay was revolutionary. Can't believe it was released in 1986.

              I'm an obsessive collector of racing/driving games across all platforms and still play outrun a few times a month using an emulator on a PC.

              I was a C64 owner so never had the connection with the Sinclair but the Mega Drive was fab!

              Clive was way ahead of his time and a true technical revolutionary. I always wondered what a Sinclair/Jobs collaboration would have produced in the 90s. He will have influenced many gamers to go on to learn more about computing/coding/game development much like the Raspberry Pi is today.

              If you're interested in tech then check out the drama Halt And Catch Fire set in 1983.
              Last edited by Citizen's Nephew; 18-09-21, 00:01. Reason: spelling

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              • #22
                Re: So Clive Sinclair has passed away

                Originally posted by Citizen's Nephew View Post
                OutRun is still up there as one of the most influential driving games of all time. I think it made 4th just behind Gran Turismo. I've seen elements of outrun recycled in games like Need For Speed and even the Forza Horizon series. It's non-linear gameplay was revolutionary. Can't believe it was released in 1986.

                I'm an obsessive collector of racing/driving games across all platforms and still play outrun a few times a month using an emulator on a PC.

                I was a C64 owner so never had the connection with the Sinclair but the Mega Drive was fab!

                Clive was way ahead of his time and a true technical revolutionary. I always wondered what a Sinclair/Jobs collaboration would have produced in the 90s. He will have influenced many gamers to go on to learn more about computing/coding/game development much like the Raspberry Pi is today.

                If you're interested in tech then check out the drama Halt And Catch Fire set in 1983.
                I'll have a look at the drama

                As a lad I used to be decent at Outrun in the arcade, used to have the top score for months in the arcade over the Island ( the arcade on the bend had the game forever , was it called carousel arcade ? ? ? )

                I had a C Vic 20 ( mum and dad couldn't afford the C64 the next year ) aswell, moved onto a Electeron ( as we couldn't afford the BBC micro ) to play on Elite , must have been around the time consoles were leading the charge then, but had to convince the folks that a home computer was important for school :hehe: I was fortunate enough to have both NES and Master system consoles, by the time and Megadrive and SNES came out I was working, so could save my own money to buy them ( though my SNES came from a dubious source )

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                • #23
                  Re: So Clive Sinclair has passed away

                  Originally posted by blue matt View Post
                  I'll have a look at the drama

                  As a lad I used to be decent at Outrun in the arcade, used to have the top score for months in the arcade over the Island ( the arcade on the bend had the game forever , was it called carousel arcade ? ? ? )

                  I had a C Vic 20 ( mum and dad couldn't afford the C64 the next year ) aswell, moved onto a Electeron ( as we couldn't afford the BBC micro ) to play on Elite , must have been around the time consoles were leading the charge then, but had to convince the folks that a home computer was important for school :hehe: I was fortunate enough to have both NES and Master system consoles, by the time and Megadrive and SNES came out I was working, so could save my own money to buy them ( though my SNES came from a dubious source )
                  It's so weird when I see contemporary games with 'insert coin' written into the code and I wonder how many actually did ever play a game where you spent your pocket money on each attempt. You had to get good in the arcades to make it last!

                  I just discovered that OutRun is still being sold on the Nintendo Switch which is incredible. The Switch is becoming quite a console and is the only one I'm interested in these days outside of PC. Switch games hold their price really well too.

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