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  • 00:10

    Sinclair was a name of varying association through the 60s, 70s and 80s. Starting in

  • 00:16

    the 60s, Sir Clive, or just Clive as he was known then, introduced the world to a series

  • 00:21

    of breakthrough micro electronic devices through Sinclair Radionics Ltd. Out of what was essentially

  • 00:28

    a back yard shed, Sinclair began to produce components for hi-fi and scientific instruments,

  • 00:34

    gradually building up the business, whilst at the same time making ever smaller, and

  • 00:39

    somewhat revolutionary devices. However, as the radionics company began to fail, even

  • 00:45

    with government assistance, he started up a new company, Sinclair instrument Ltd, in

  • 00:51

    August 1975 and launched the world’s first digital watch, however like some of Sinclair’s

  • 00:58

    earlier products, there were reliability issues, coupled with a terrible battery life. From

  • 01:04

    there Sinclair’s new company went through a few more name iterations before launching

  • 01:10

    the ZX80, ZX81 and ultimately the Sinclair Spectrum throughout the early 1980s under

  • 01:16

    the name of Sinclair Research Ltd. The Spectrum was a huge success and really introduced the

  • 01:23

    UK to the world of home micro-computing. However ongoing competition with Acorn and Commodore

  • 01:29

    drove Sinclair with a desire to break into the professional market place, and it’s

  • 01:34

    from this place, on January 12th, 1984 when we arrive at the Sinclair QL. The QL standing

  • 01:42

    for Quantum Leap – a name conjured to describe the technological leap. A system aimed at

  • 01:48

    serious home users and business professionals, and launched (and I’ll use that word lightly)

  • 01:54

    exactly 12 days before Steve Jobs would announce the Apple Macintosh. Now, you may have noticed

  • 02:01

    from my other videos that I have a particular fondness for obscure & plight bound machines,

  • 02:07

    particularly those which failed to make it in the early micro computing world. I think

  • 02:12

    it’s because of their untapped potential… a lost relic from a forgotten age… or maybe

  • 02:18

    just because they tried so hard, and deserve some recognition. Either way, the Sinclair

  • 02:24

    QL is no exception. In fact, in many ways, it’s the leader of the pack. If you’ve

  • 02:31

    watched the BBC Dramatisation Micro Men (which I whole heartedly and repeatedly recommend),

  • 02:36

    then you’ll know that Sinclair always wanted his products to be viewed as elegant, professional

  • 02:41

    & pioneering, and even though the Speccy sold tremendously well, the film shows him somewhat

  • 02:47

    pained that the machine was only viewed as a low end games machine, hence his inspiration

  • 02:52

    for the more professional QL. The reality however, seems a little more murky. In a fairly

  • 02:59

    recent interview with David Karlin, who was the QL’s chief design engineer, it appears

  • 03:04

    that although many at Sinclair wanted the machine to be aimed completely at business

  • 03:08

    and professional use, Clive may have seen the machine as just a more powerful Spectrum

  • 03:13

    replacement. And although most decisions were made by Clive himself and Nigel Searle, who

  • 03:19

    was the MD of the business; This slight contention may have contributed to slightly muddled marketing

  • 03:24

    and explains why the machine has a TV modulator (if a pretty blurry one). In any case the

  • 03:31

    QL was touted as a competitor to fend off Amstrad, IBM, Apple and Acorn in the professional

  • 03:38

    world. This is evident in the famous advert showing Clive leaping over several higher

  • 03:44

    cost competitor machines. The QL was launched on 12 January 1984 at £399 by mail order,

  • 04:01

    and when I say launched, it was done in the true Sinclair fashion, with orders taken immediately

  • 04:07

    on a promise to deliver within 28 days. In reality, there wasn’t even a finished prototype

  • 04:13

    at this stage, and the first machines began to ship in April at a slow and steady pace.

  • 04:19

    However due to this apparent rushing, the first machines were plagued with problems.

  • 04:24

    Some had half the ROM held on a dongle plugged into the back, others had firmware bugs in

  • 04:29

    the built-in SuperBASIC language and most suffered from unreliable Microdrives, which

  • 04:34

    were chosen due to their lower cost over floppy disks but higher speed than tapes. These problems

  • 04:39

    tainted the initial reputation of the machine, but in reality it just wasn’t well suited

  • 04:44

    for the business world. The Microdrives were non standard, the keyboard was uncomfortable

  • 04:49

    and most people associated it’s look with the soon to be released Spectrum+ model, and

  • 04:54

    therefore cast it’s professional credibility aside. High street sales of the QL began in

  • 05:01

    August 1984 – the same time as the QL branded Vision monitor was released -, but yet only

  • 05:07

    a few months later, the QL’s price was halved to £199 in the hope that it would lure more

  • 05:13

    home users, however given the lack of games available for the platform, most opted to

  • 05:18

    stick with their trusty Spectrums, or just upgraded to the Plus model released later

  • 05:23

    in 1984. You can see how similar the aesthetics of these two machines are. Hardware Internally,

  • 05:39

    the QL is based on a Motorola 68008 running at 7.5MHz. Essentially this is a cut down

  • 05:46

    68000 found in the Atari ST and Amiga 500, with a 16 bit internal architecture, but only

  • 05:53

    an 8 bit address bus. Even so, this drastic switch from the Sinclair Spectrum’s 8 bit

  • 05:58

    Z80 processor meant there would be no backwards compatibility with the massively popular gaming

  • 06:03

    machine. This, of course wiped out a massive opportunity for the machine to have an huge

  • 06:08

    established software collection. The machine sported 128kb of RAM, which was expandable

  • 06:15

    to 896kb and for storage, made use of the two built in Microdrive units. One essentially

  • 06:24

    for loading and one for saving work to. Now, although these Microdrives were far cheaper

  • 06:30

    than the new, fangled floppy disks, especially if you lack Alan Sugar’s haggling skills,

  • 06:35

    they were notoriously unreliable, until Samsung took over their manufacture, and the data

  • 06:41

    format wasn’t even backwards compatible with the Spectrum’s Microdrive peripherals,

  • 06:46

    so even if you’d saved some documents on your Speccy, there was no way to open them

  • 06:50

    on the QL. This really was like pissing over the path you’d just laid for yourself. The

  • 06:56

    tapes themselves – or wafers, as they’re known – are essentially like tiny 8 track

  • 07:00

    tapes. They hold a 5 metre reel of tape which spins at 30 inches per second against the

  • 07:06

    machine’s read/write heads. The entire tape can be span within 8 seconds with data read

  • 07:12

    at 15kb per second. For the QL, each tape can hold 100kb of data, although this can

  • 07:18

    be increased slightly by spinning though and formatting the tape a few times, which stretches

  • 07:24

    it slightly (now to me this sounds like the microdrive version of punching a notch in

  • 07:29

    double density 3.5″ disks to make them high density – a useful, but error prone solution).

  • 07:36

    The tape itself spins only in one direction, with the tape brain-bendingly reeled back

  • 07:41

    into itself and speeled through the drives head 16 times faster than a standard cassette.

  • 07:48

    Two video modes were available. Either 256×256 with 8 colours, or 512×256 with the 4 colours

  • 07:57

    of black, red, green and white, which you will see evident in most applications software.

  • 08:02

    This screen mode can accommodate an impressive 25 lines of 85 characters! Whoop! Two custom

  • 08:10

    ULAs were created to handle the video, DRAM and external interfaces such as the RS-232

  • 08:17

    ports. These were the ZX8301 (which was a play on the QL’s development codename – the

  • 08:24

    ZX83) and the ZX8302. The ZX8301 responsible for clock timing and the video display was

  • 08:31

    initially very fragile and even unplugging the RGB connection whilst in use could fry

  • 08:37

    the chip. The ZX8302 also had it’s quirks, including only 1 RS-232 receiver, meaning

  • 08:45

    that both serial ports had to run at the same baud, essentially forbidding the ability to

  • 08:50

    connect a printer and a modem at the same time. An Intel 8049 chip was used to control

  • 08:57

    the rather limited sound output. Unfortunately, we had to wait until 1985 and the Spectrum

  • 09:03

    128k+ for a proper sound chip to appear in a Sinclair machine. It’s common on early

  • 09:10

    machines to see a mess of fixes and re-wiring which are essential to make the hardware operate

  • 09:15

    without glitches. The back of the machine sports two proprietary local networking sockets

  • 09:21

    for connecting QLs in serial (if you ever see more than 1 at a time), an RGB out connector,

  • 09:28

    TV modulator out, two serial ports, two custom joystick ports and a ROM connector for cartridges

  • 09:34

    and expansion devices. Mine still has this neat little black cover in place. The case

  • 09:53

    itself is very industrial and angular – a step away from the soft features of the Spectrum

  • 09:58

    – featuring a new type of spongy plastic keyboard which backed onto a membrane and

  • 10:03

    metal fixing plate. It’s a huge step up from the original rubber keyed Speccy and

  • 10:08

    would feature on all subsequent Spectrum models to come. I actually really like the feel of

  • 10:13

    this one, it feels deeper than the later Spectrum keyboards and somehow more responsive. Power

  • 10:20

    is supplied through a 9v DC brick, similar to other Sinclair machines, but with a new

  • 10:25

    3 pin adaptor going into the machine. On boot of the machine, you’re first asked whether

  • 10:30

    you’re using a monitor or TV display. With SuperBASIC offering a multi window experience

  • 10:36

    for monitors. Upon selection you’re then booted into a command line which serves as

  • 10:42

    both the operating system and BASIC interpreter. GST Computer Systems were originally commissioned

  • 10:47

    to write the operating system, but Sinclair instead opted for the multi-tasking in-house

  • 10:52

    QDOS produced by Tony Tebby, which resided in the 48k ROM. GST’s offering was later

  • 10:59

    made available via a ROM cartridge and the object format inspired by them would later

  • 11:04

    be used to create programs for the Atari ST, including 1stWord, the ST’s bundled Word

  • 11:11

    processor. The built in programming language, SuperBASIC is, command wise, much like the

  • 11:16

    standard Spectrum basic, although there are no keyboard shortcuts and you have the addition

  • 11:21

    of structure! This means that line numbering is essentially done away with, in place of

  • 11:26

    labels and repetition features, much like Quick BASIC for Microsoft DOS. It’s actually

  • 11:32

    the first second generation BASIC language of this type to be built into ROM. Flicking

  • 11:37

    through the massively hefty & apparently photocopied manual – printed before the machine was

  • 11:43

    even made – you can see, like the machine, it was clearly rushed, evident from the number

  • 11:48

    of corrections someone (possibly Clive himself) has made in this copy. But, inside, you’ll

  • 11:54

    find some BASIC programmes to type in and show off to your fellow professional work

  • 11:59

    colleagues. Ooooo. Ahhhh. Mmmmmmmmm. Ahhhhh, the good ol’ days of BASIC interpreters

  • 12:11

    on boot. Software This would ordinarily be the part where I talk about games, but as

  • 12:19

    the QL was intended for more serious use. I’ll cover some of the applications software

  • 12:24

    first. Now, my machine comes with this delightful Microsoft Office like box of applications

  • 12:31

    developed by PSION, of handheld organiser fame. *Oooohhhhh, which one to pick*. Inside

  • 12:39

    there’s the choice of Quill, a wordprocessor, Abacus, the spreadsheet, Archive which is

  • 12:44

    a database and Easel which offers business graphics and charts. To load each micro tape

  • 12:49

    up you simply use skill and finesse to un-case it, ahhhh, errrrrm, yep, OK! Then…. plonk

  • 13:01

    it in the first Microdrive for loading. A swift boot and the drive whirs into action

  • 13:06

    delivering you into your choice of application. The software is surprisingly easy to use,

  • 13:16

    and although they don’t have the same commands as Excel or Lotus 1-2-3, they do the job you’d

  • 13:22

    expect for business software. I wouldn’t be too trusting about saving my work to those

  • 13:26

    Micro wafers though. Hmmmmmmmmm. Thankfully there are a number of games available for

  • 13:34

    the system, and better yet, the dreaded (but quaint) colour clash from the Spectrum is

  • 13:39

    gone. Instead we’re offered what appear to be more colourful visuals, but on second

  • 13:44

    inspection expose themselves as limited to 8 colours on-screen from a palette of 256,

  • 13:52

    albeit with the ability to flash each pixel. This limitation stifles the games somewhat

  • 13:58

    although clever overlaying can produce more colourful visuals. Anyway, here’s the best

  • 14:03

    of

  • 14:26

    the bunch. Demise Despite not achieving it’s expected sales, the QL did make some progress

  • 15:13

    into professional and home markets, selling 150,000 units. Enough for several companies

  • 15:19

    to pop up and support users who had plunged into the machine. However, it was no where

  • 15:24

    near enough to save Sinclair’s fortunes, having already failed with the Sinclair C5

  • 15:30

    and suffering the video game crash of ’85. Out of this innovative misfortune, Alan Sugar’s

  • 15:43

    Amstrad stepped up, and using purely capitalist driven skills, acquired Sinclair in early

  • 15:50

    1986, immediately abandoning the QL. Fortunately the same companies who supported the machine

  • 15:57

    beforehand, quickly stepped up to fill the void, including CST and Dansoft, who created

  • 16:03

    the Thor line of compatible machines. The original creator of the Linux kernal, Linus

  • 16:09

    Torvalds actually attributed his operating system breakthrough to having owned a Sinclair

  • 16:14

    QL himself sometime around this era. Being fed up of the limited software array, he decided

  • 16:20

    to write his own, and from there Linux was essentially born. He then later ported this

  • 16:26

    to PC to meet a somewhat expanded audience. Because of the machine’s expandability,

  • 16:32

    new ROMs were created such as the Minerva replacement for QDOS. There were also expansion

  • 16:37

    cards such as the Trump card which added memory expansion and a floppy disk interface. In

  • 16:42

    the 1990s, two redesigned motherboards were created for the system, offering much more

  • 16:47

    powerful CPUs and additions such as ethernet and the actual ability to run the Linux operating

  • 16:53

    system, and in fact, some hardware and software is still created for the machine to this day.

  • 16:59

    Pop onto some QL forums and you can see that there’s still at least some people who are

  • 17:03

    making use of what this machine had to offer. This includes a swave of emulators on various

  • 17:09

    platforms and even an official successor to QDOS called SMSQ/E, again written by Tony

  • 17:16

    Tebby. Maybe, like the Sinclair C5, Clive was just ahead of his time with this often

  • 17:22

    forgotten machine. Surprisingly, given the reliability issues with a lot of Sinclair

  • 17:28

    hardware, most QLs seem to be in good working order today, although Microdrive’s and their

  • 17:32

    software are more hit and miss. If you’re lucky enough have a system with Samsung made

  • 17:38

    microdrives, you still need to be wary of eroding felt pads on the wafers themselves.

  • 17:42

    But hey, most of my software seemed to work just fine. So if you’ve got a spare £80

  • 17:48

    odd quid, why not pick up a genuine piece of UK computing history and give it a bash. What’s the worst that can happen?

All

The example sentences of PROGRAMMES in videos (15 in total of 30)

she personal pronoun accurately adverb predicted verb, past tense which wh-determiner tv proper noun, singular programmes noun, plural and coordinating conjunction films noun, plural would modal take verb, base form home verb, base form each determiner of preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner 25 cardinal number awards noun, plural .
find verb, base form some determiner basic proper noun, singular programmes noun, plural to to type verb, base form in preposition or subordinating conjunction and coordinating conjunction show noun, singular or mass off preposition or subordinating conjunction to to your possessive pronoun fellow noun, singular or mass professional adjective work noun, singular or mass
laws proper noun, singular that preposition or subordinating conjunction set verb, past participle a determiner minimum adjective age noun, singular or mass for preposition or subordinating conjunction marriage noun, singular or mass ; programmes noun, plural that wh-determiner invest verb, base form in preposition or subordinating conjunction girls noun, plural , enabling verb, gerund or present participle them personal pronoun
when wh-adverb you personal pronoun re noun, singular or mass a determiner director noun, singular or mass , writer noun, singular or mass and coordinating conjunction producer noun, singular or mass for preposition or subordinating conjunction one cardinal number of preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner most adverb, superlative successful adjective tv proper noun, singular programmes noun, plural
but coordinating conjunction one cardinal number day noun, singular or mass i personal pronoun would modal like verb, base form to to get verb, base form part noun, singular or mass in preposition or subordinating conjunction more adjective, comparative tv proper noun, singular programmes noun, plural , documentaries noun, plural or coordinating conjunction films noun, plural .
from preposition or subordinating conjunction wound noun, singular or mass management noun, singular or mass all predeterminer the determiner way noun, singular or mass to to counselling verb, gerund or present participle , work noun, singular or mass hardening verb, gerund or present participle and coordinating conjunction graded verb, past participle return noun, singular or mass to to work verb, base form programmes noun, plural .
has verb, 3rd person singular present organised verb, past participle a determiner series noun, singular or mass of preposition or subordinating conjunction programmes noun, plural to to discuss verb, base form some determiner issues noun, plural that determiner affect noun, singular or mass half noun, singular or mass the determiner world noun, singular or mass 's possessive ending population noun, singular or mass .
where wh-adverb sony proper noun, singular has verb, 3rd person singular present an determiner advantage noun, singular or mass is verb, 3rd person singular present with preposition or subordinating conjunction lower adjective, comparative bit noun, singular or mass rate noun, singular or mass or coordinating conjunction more adverb, comparative heavily adverb compressed verb, past tense programmes noun, plural
the determiner programmes noun, plural at preposition or subordinating conjunction ucl proper noun, singular support noun, singular or mass the determiner student noun, singular or mass in preposition or subordinating conjunction a determiner number noun, singular or mass of preposition or subordinating conjunction ways noun, plural , through preposition or subordinating conjunction both determiner personal adjective
so adverb given verb, past participle that preposition or subordinating conjunction they personal pronoun 've verb, non-3rd person singular present extended verb, past participle their possessive pronoun dragnet noun, singular or mass programmes noun, plural so adverb far adverb and coordinating conjunction wide adjective without preposition or subordinating conjunction any determiner public adjective
that wh-determiner 's verb, 3rd person singular present an determiner important adjective part noun, singular or mass of preposition or subordinating conjunction british proper noun, singular culture noun, singular or mass because preposition or subordinating conjunction it personal pronoun 's verb, 3rd person singular present used verb, past participle in preposition or subordinating conjunction so adverb many adjective tv proper noun, singular programmes noun, plural
in preposition or subordinating conjunction their possessive pronoun staterooms noun, plural through preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner entire adjective voyage noun, singular or mass , so preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner ship noun, singular or mass s proper noun, singular often adverb passed verb, past tense out preposition or subordinating conjunction daily adjective programmes noun, plural that preposition or subordinating conjunction
of preposition or subordinating conjunction drph proper noun, singular programmes noun, plural around preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner world noun, singular or mass , and coordinating conjunction there existential there are verb, non-3rd person singular present now adverb quite adverb a determiner few adjective institutions noun, plural which wh-determiner offer verb, non-3rd person singular present
here adverb we personal pronoun are verb, non-3rd person singular present at preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner helix proper noun, singular , home noun, singular or mass to to countless adjective shows noun, plural and coordinating conjunction tv proper noun, singular programmes proper noun, singular where wh-adverb
pre proper noun, singular - sets noun, plural for preposition or subordinating conjunction other adjective programmes noun, plural like preposition or subordinating conjunction i personal pronoun mentioned verb, past tense so preposition or subordinating conjunction it personal pronoun s proper noun, singular applicable adjective across preposition or subordinating conjunction a determiner wide adjective range noun, singular or mass of preposition or subordinating conjunction programmes noun, plural

Use "programmes" in a sentence | "programmes" example sentences

How to use "programmes" in a sentence?

  • Corporate partners help UNICEF fund our programmes for children, advocate with us on their behalf, or facilitate our work through logistical, technical, research or supply support.
    -Carol Bellamy-
  • It worries me that young singers think you can shortcut the training and go straight to fame and fortune, and programmes like Pop Idol have encouraged that.
    -Lesley Garrett-
  • The BBC produces wonderful programmes; it also produces a load of old rubbish.
    -Jonathan Dimbleby-
  • Creative writing programmes are not very necessary. They just exist so that people like us can make a living.
    -Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie-
  • The foundations of a strong economy don't rest alone on the decisions of Chancellors or the spending programmes of government.
    -George Osborne-
  • I see my work plagiarized in gardening programmes and decorating programmes and car adverts, and I suppose I have to accept that's just the way art gets assimilated into culture.
    -Andy Goldsworthy-
  • Training and development: The best development programmes change the way people see themselves
    -John Bright-
  • I was fortunate in that I attended university in Canada in the early 1970s when you could take a true liberal arts degree with no programmes, majors or minors.
    -O.R. Melling-

Definition and meaning of PROGRAMMES

What does "programmes mean?"

/ˈprōˌɡram/

noun
set of related measures.
other
Plans or schedule of events.
verb
provide machine with program.

What are synonyms of "programmes"?
Some common synonyms of "programmes" are:
  • scheme,
  • plan,
  • initiative,
  • project,
  • strategy,
  • solution,
  • application,
  • routine,
  • instance,
  • solution,
  • broadcast,
  • production,

You can find detailed definitions of them on this page.