@RenewedRebecca @johntimaeus @RnDanger @vkc Agree, my ZX80, upgraded to ZX81, was also more Basic relying on my competence than on AI! I regretted those days I didn't buy a Commodore also.
There are reasons this book has a separate listing of the "Cadanza" program for the MC series computer. I didn't have the "memory expansion pack" which also changed some of the hard limits in Basic. So many limitations I don't even remember all of them.
@johntimaeus @RenewedRebecca @RnDanger @vkc I upgraded my ZX80/81 from the internal 1K memory with the huge external 16K memory! Seen at the backend of the computer in my photo in this blog post: https://www.hemrin.com/walking-to-linux/walking-to-linux
@RnDanger @johntimaeus @RenewedRebecca @vkc The ZX80/81 used a normal analog TV as screen, only option, it had built in RF for a TV channel, so tune in the TV to the channel/frequency they use. The memory was shared btw graphics and code, meant that "big" programs coming close to 1K reduced numer of rows shown on screen down to zero, then I had to take away some code in blindness until something could be seen on screen again. The keyboard was close to type on a table. 1/2
@RnDanger @johntimaeus @RenewedRebecca @vkc
It was plastic film, not sure how the contacts were done under it. When I upgraded to ZX81, a new "keyboard" was included, which meant to fix the new film above with tape.
2/2