Other retro tech, t...
 

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[Closed] Other retro tech, then......

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[img] [/img]

I bought one of these whilst on business in Wisconsin, 1993. I didn't get around to buying the TV tuner "cartridge."


 
Posted : 08/04/2014 11:53 am
 D0NK
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"BarcodeBattler", that sounds like a pretty extreme version of supermarket wars.

Gamegear, was that about the equivalent of a mastersystem?


 
Posted : 08/04/2014 11:55 am
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Game Gear! Think I might still have one somewhere


 
Posted : 08/04/2014 12:01 pm
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Shinobi on the game gear consumed me. I'm sure I've still got one somewhere, TV tuner too.


 
Posted : 08/04/2014 12:02 pm
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got one of these lurking in the loft, got it for £5 of a clerk of works,
its reasonably accurate for quick 90deg setouts not as quick as the 'wimpey clap' Simple bit of kit that works well
[img] [/img]


 
Posted : 08/04/2014 2:34 pm
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[img] [/img]

Akai S1000

Them bad boys was the sampler to have around '93 when jungle arrived. Many a happy hour messing around with mine. Utterly utterly trounced by the simplicity and speed of Reason 1 in 2000.

[img] http://retrothing.typepad.com/.a/6a00d83452989a69e20147e292782c970b-pi [/img]

Donkey Kong 2 handheld.

I had it. I was about 10. It was awesome.


 
Posted : 08/04/2014 3:00 pm
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I present Big Trak.
as a child of the 80s - this was a technological marvel.
friend had one and used to bring it into school on the last day of term. soooo jealous.

[img] [/img]


 
Posted : 08/04/2014 3:29 pm
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I bet a 'homebrew' big trak could be built with a rasberry pi computer, some meccano and powered by laptop batteries with a smartphone as controller...


 
Posted : 08/04/2014 4:12 pm
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Love these threads 😀

I was a MiniDisc person - full deck, portable recorder, and portable player.

😀


 
Posted : 08/04/2014 4:21 pm
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Ed, BigTrak is back....[url= http://www.bigtrakxtr.co.uk/ ]Clicky linky! [/url]

The trailer on the original was utterly gash, though! 🙂


 
Posted : 08/04/2014 4:47 pm
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I'd love to have a Yamaha DX7 but they're effing expensive now!


 
Posted : 08/04/2014 5:33 pm
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I have a Windows XP computer, does that count yet?! 😉


 
Posted : 08/04/2014 5:56 pm
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I had one of these as an upgrade from the Nintendo single game (donkey Kong etc) thingies above. It was cutting edge at the time, but I lost interest in playing computer games.

[img] [/img]


 
Posted : 08/04/2014 6:03 pm
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Our storesman was showing me a mint BigTrak, with trailer both still boxed that he bought off e-bay the other day. I so wanted one of those when I was young. Can still remember lusting after them in Boots.

I had a Palm PDA, with the Handspring phone plug in. That was ACE! (official)
[img] [/img]


 
Posted : 08/04/2014 6:06 pm
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[img] [/img]

Well, I thought it was hi-tech at the time...


 
Posted : 08/04/2014 6:45 pm
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Oh, I remember that. It was all mechanical, wasn't it?

That's just jogged an old memory actually. Anyone remember, there used to be a series of little hand-held clockwork games, red plastic case and a clear front, maybe about the size a modern smartphone but 1cm or so thick? You'd wind them up, then frob a basic control on the front to move a plastic racecar or some such as the screen asthmatically rasped past. No idea what they were called now, ring any bells with anyone?


 
Posted : 08/04/2014 7:01 pm
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Pocketeers!

http://www.masters.me.uk/pocketeers/pocketeers1.htm

[img] [/img]

[img] [/img]


 
Posted : 08/04/2014 7:10 pm
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Clockwork and celluloid, but I thought it was witchcraft at the time.
😳

Cougar, I vaguely remember that. I think you mean the [url= ]pocket raceway[/url]. My mate had one, it was a bit... pants

Edit: bugger, too slow


 
Posted : 08/04/2014 7:11 pm
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Pocketeers!

I had completely forgotten about those! I had Time Up and friends had the driving ones.

A bit more up to date:

[img] [/img]


 
Posted : 08/04/2014 9:15 pm
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I loved the Grandstand games. I've still got Astro Wars upstairs (next to my Big Trak), along with Scramble and Firefox.

I don't think my AW is working, though; as a kid, I discovered that if you upped the voltage on the "universal power supply" then it made the display really bright, with fairly inevitable longer-term results.


 
Posted : 08/04/2014 9:24 pm
 rob2
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Man, Firefox. I had that.

I can remember the sound of those poketeers too.

We played "game of Dracula" the board game at the weekend. My 3 & 5 year olds love it. Nearly 40 yrs old now I think.


 
Posted : 08/04/2014 9:34 pm
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I loved the Grandstand games. I've still got Astro Wars upstairs (next to my Big Trak), along with Scramble and Firefox.

I got AW one Christmas and Scramble the next. Scramble was a lot easier. One brother had the Pacman.

After that I got a Spectrum. Something that only played one game seemed odd.


 
Posted : 08/04/2014 9:43 pm
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Was that "Munchman"?


 
Posted : 08/04/2014 9:54 pm
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I still have one of these (though not used any more) - still think it was an awesome idea. PCMCIA calendar and address book. No good for inputting, but synchonised with Outlook 15 years ago. Also got a box full of Palm Pilots (V, Vx, Tungsten). I had some really early TomTom software on the Tungsten, with an eTrex connected by a cable. Could only hold part of a country at any one time though.

[img] [/img]


 
Posted : 08/04/2014 9:56 pm
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Was that "Munchman"?

Yes
[img] [/img]

Couldn't remember the name. Just googled the image.

We also had this:
[img] [/img]


 
Posted : 08/04/2014 9:57 pm
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Some amazing stuff posted here ... a lot of which I remember.

Shinobi on the game gear consumed me.
Me too.

I also lost a lot of time to:

[img] [/img]

27 floppy discs it took to install !

Then once installed, I could use this:

[img] [/img]

to get onto bulletin boards ... oh the days 🙂

As for minidisc, I still have a mini-disc player/recorder in a drawer somewhere. Mine had an optical input so I could rip straight from a CD player onto the disc with minimal loss of quality. Its a pity they never really hit it big time, I really liked the format.


 
Posted : 08/04/2014 10:14 pm
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Donkey Kong 2 handheld.

I had it. I was about 10. It was awesome.

Same here I think, not sure about the age but I remember the game. I remember getting my first original Gameboy as well 🙂


 
Posted : 08/04/2014 10:53 pm
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johnny astro (hardly qualifies as tech though)


 
Posted : 08/04/2014 11:07 pm
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Is OS2 retro then? I was still using it in Bank of Scotland up until I think 2005... (when they rolled out XP to replace it, they cunningly did it by giving is 2 PCs each and a switch box, because half the actual banking software didn't run on windows)


 
Posted : 08/04/2014 11:24 pm
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to get onto bulletin boards ... oh the days

Can still do that. Www.mono.org


 
Posted : 08/04/2014 11:30 pm
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I had totally forgotten about most of this stuff, but I'm pretty amazed how many of the exact items in the photos I had in the games, toys, and music veins.


 
Posted : 09/04/2014 1:45 am
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yo, mefty

[img] [/img]


 
Posted : 09/04/2014 2:13 am
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[img] [/img]


 
Posted : 09/04/2014 4:22 am
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[img] https://www.flickr.com/photos/122681834@N04/ [/img]

The Casio was running the original batteries the last time I used it about a year ago, they've died now though - about 38 years life I should complain and get my money back!


 
Posted : 09/04/2014 6:08 am
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Link to photo doesn't work, sorry - pic of Sinclair Cambridge and Casio fx-81 calculators!


 
Posted : 09/04/2014 6:25 am
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I bet a 'homebrew' big trak could be built with a rasberry pi computer, some meccano and powered by laptop batteries with a smartphone as controller...

When I was a kid, I built one out of a Commodore 64 and a remote control jeep - the C64 was great for bodging stuff.


 
Posted : 09/04/2014 6:47 am
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Galaxy Invader 1000 was awesome.

On the box it says 2K Bytes L.S.I. - is that Large Scale Integration?

How twee.

[img] [/img]

My mate got this for xmas and I was bottle green with envy. The downhill skiing game was awesome.

The Sinclair calculator still looks stylish. I LOVED their logo. I used to recreate it with a pen on my exercise books at school.


 
Posted : 09/04/2014 11:28 am
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Astrowars! 🙂 brilliant!


 
Posted : 09/04/2014 11:40 am
 Alex
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Whie everyone had ZX Speccy's and Vic20s/C64s, we had this (couldn't afford BBC Micro)

[img] [/img]

I wrote lots of games for that, but my heart was lost to sensible soccer on the Vic20. What a fantastic game that was. Whenever I see FIFA-14 or something, I think 'derivative tosh' 🙂

You can still get them but silly money: [url= http://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/ULTRA-RARE-VINTAGE-ACORN-ATOM-COMPUTER-VGC-/301096426641?_trksid=p2054897.l4275 ]eBay[/url]

And non one has mentioned this yet:

[img] [/img]

First game: Basketball. About 9 pixels used in the entire game. In no way did this reduce its awesomeness to a small boy!


 
Posted : 09/04/2014 11:43 am
 Alex
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Oh and that Modem reminded me of my first 'computing' experience at school in about 1980 where the 'computer club' were allowed to use the Uni Mainframe for 15 mins a day. The interface was a teletype terminal and

[img] [/img]

300 baud if I remember rightly. What a club that was, we got all the girls. No, really.


 
Posted : 09/04/2014 11:45 am
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Still have a pair of these in the shed - Mid '90s Duracell lights. I had 2 on the front! Massive and very little output:

[img] [/img]

Edit: I'm pushing it a bit by calling these 'Tech'

Edit 2: Just looked back on thread and saw a game gear - got one of those too, in the loft, with a bag load of games....


 
Posted : 09/04/2014 12:10 pm
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[img] [/img]


 
Posted : 09/04/2014 12:40 pm
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[b]Technics sl-1200 (Original MK1, 1973, Servo not Quartz), + Stanton 881s, + Infinity Black Widow.[/b]

[URL= http://i361.photobucket.com/albums/oo57/hellenic_vanagon/P3310377_zps2b3e7348.jp g" target="_blank">http://i361.photobucket.com/albums/oo57/hellenic_vanagon/P3310377_zps2b3e7348.jp g"/> [/IMG][/URL]

It has two prizes

[URL= http://i361.photobucket.com/albums/oo57/hellenic_vanagon/Alphanutau3AF0gammarhoalphaphiomicronalphapi3CC0TWOPRIZES4jpg_zpsd643f066.pn g" target="_blank">http://i361.photobucket.com/albums/oo57/hellenic_vanagon/Alphanutau3AF0gammarhoalphaphiomicronalphapi3CC0TWOPRIZES4jpg_zpsd643f066.pn g"/> [/IMG][/URL]

And a respectable blind test vs Rega Planar 3:

"Simply put, the Technics SL-120 walked all over the other two turntables. "It's just better balanced in every way," one panelist said. The SL-120's best attribute was its bass, which was much fuller, more tuneful and more precise than the other turntables could muster. The difference wasn't subtle; I could hear it even from behind the speakers. But it wasn't just the bass-the SL-120 also had a warmer, more natural tonal balance than the other turntables. Of the six listeners, five picked the SL-120 as their clear favorite"

http://www.iavscanada.com/Articles/art_turntable.htm


 
Posted : 08/06/2014 2:39 pm
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