Computer Inventor Finds Computers "Annoying"
Sir Clive Sinclair won't even read his email from family and friends.
In a recent interview with the UK newspaper The Observer, computer inventor Sir Clive Sinclair said that he finds computers annoying. In fact, Sinclair said that he doesn't use a computer at all. Emails are read aloud by his assistant, as he finds emails just as annoying.
"I'd much prefer someone would telephone me if they want to communicate," he said. "No, it's not sheer laziness – I just don't want to be distracted by the whole process. Nightmare."
That's surprising given that he co-created the Sinclair ZX80 back in 1980, opening the door to personal mass-market computing in the home like the TSR-80 and the Commodore 64. He admits that the computer-- along with the follow-up ZX81-- made him loads of money. The former computer sold around 50,000 units whereas that newer ZX81, released in 1981, sold around 250,000 units.
Given today's hardware standards, both machines are primitive. The ZX80 had a membrane keyboard, 1K of memory, and used a cassette player to load programs. The ZX81 had a bit more to offer, allowing peripherals such as daughterboards for added memory and external keyboards.
With that said, it would seem that Sinclair would actually embrace the simplicity that today's technology provides. That's not in case. In fact, he blasted the designs of today.
"Our machines were lean and efficient," he said. "The sad thing is that today's computers totally abuse their memory--totally wasteful, you have to wait for the damn things to boot up, just appalling designs. Absolute mess! So dreadful it's heartbreaking."
It's no wonder he avoids the PC. Perhaps he should re-invent today's PC.
- Blizzard "Still Targeting First Half" For StarCraft II
- StarCraft II Beta Impressions and Screens
- QOTD: Should Schools Use Laptops to Watch Kids?
- Just Cause 2 Demo Released Next Week
- School Shows Off Webcam Controlling Ability
- Caption Contest: Gates and Jobs Do Dinner
- Upcoming Asus Eee PC's Have 14-Hour Battery
- Samsung's Active 3D Glasses Gets Priced
- Pyramid PC Will Make Stargate Fans Drool
- Intel Introduces Faster Atom N470 at 1.83 GHz
- Plextor Jumps Into SSD Fray With 64GB, 128GB
- Aliens: Colonial Marines Back in the Picture
- Activision Shuts Down Indie King's Quest Sequel
- Corsair Launches Reactor, Nova SSDs
- Leading Intel Executive Suffers Stroke
- VIDEO: Skinput Uses Your Body as a Touchscreen
- SPIED: Nvidia GTX 470 'Fermi' PCB Cut-out Cooler
- Hack Expert Says Windows 7 is Hard to Hack






Come on then Clive! Give us some of that Sinclair Magic
The Sinclair 2010 would be ace. do it clive!
He's probably too old now. But, about memory management; he's not wrong. So many programmers are inefficient at what they do. I will even admit that I don't always use the most efficient techniques, I don't even always know them. I strive to learn them though!
Ahh, Manic Miner and Jetpac on the rubber-keyed Spectrum ZX81 - my hamster ate some of my keys, which actually helped locate which was which by touch...
Totally agree on memory management - the Spectrum (and the Amiga / Atari ST later on to a lesser extent) taught programmers to actually work to confines rather than just demandnig larger and larger specs. no bad thing to be efficient...