I recently bought a refurbed rubber key spectrum, composite modded, and I've had a great time playing with it.
I also bought a SD card interface for instant game loading and a joystick port, and a tape emulator box for the authentic tape loading experience.
I've also got a set of almost mint manuals, and in some ways for me this is the most nostalgic part of the experience of using the hardware. Going back through the manuals, typing in examples on the 'dead flesh' keyboard using the keyword entry system. It takes me right back to those days of going round my friend's houses and typing in basic programs on their machines.
I also got a refurbed ZX81 with new ULA, composite mod and internal 32K ram, and that too has been a massive nostalgia trip.
The best thing about living through that home computing era was that every day brought new games and new hardware. You could see new genres of games being invented every day. The biggest thing holding back computer games back then were the arcades, as home computer games often tried to emulate them, with often poor results, while the best games were original and made innovative use of the hardware.
I also bought a SD card interface for instant game loading and a joystick port, and a tape emulator box for the authentic tape loading experience.
I've also got a set of almost mint manuals, and in some ways for me this is the most nostalgic part of the experience of using the hardware. Going back through the manuals, typing in examples on the 'dead flesh' keyboard using the keyword entry system. It takes me right back to those days of going round my friend's houses and typing in basic programs on their machines.
I also got a refurbed ZX81 with new ULA, composite mod and internal 32K ram, and that too has been a massive nostalgia trip.
The best thing about living through that home computing era was that every day brought new games and new hardware. You could see new genres of games being invented every day. The biggest thing holding back computer games back then were the arcades, as home computer games often tried to emulate them, with often poor results, while the best games were original and made innovative use of the hardware.