MyAcornElectron.com is running a Electron User Pendragon competition. You could win a signed piece of artwork from the Pendragon Electron User column from 1986.
Tag: acorn
Syntax Era (Micro Men) preview
Pre final edit clips from Syntax Era (Micro Men)
Micro Men is a one-off BBC drama television show set in the late 1970s and the early-mid 1980s, about the rise of the British home computer market.
Addition – Acorn Archimedes A3010
This is a machine that I have been after for some time. This model was more aimed at the home user rather than schools as it
BeebSID – C64 SID chip for the BBC Micro in “The Internet” case
The BeebSID allows you to attach a Commodore SID audio chip to a Acorn BBC computer. The case was inspired by the Internet box used
Google Sponsors Centre for Computing History
The Centre for Computing History, Cambridge is delighted to announce a new educational partnership with Google. This will involve an exciting new initiative to introduce computer programming to children across the UK.
Acorn Archimedes is 25
Article taken from The Register – Acorn Archimedes is 25 The Acorn Archimedes is 25 years old this month (June 2012). The first machines based
New Addition – Acorn A7000
Picked up one of these yesterday – An Acorn A7000. The specifications for this machine are… CPU: ARM7500 clocked at 32 MHz. With hardware floating point
Beeb@30 – Thirty years of the BBC Micro and Computer Literacy Project
The Computer Literacy Project was a BBC-led initiative to improve computing education in Britain. A new series entitled The Computer Programme was planned for 1982,
Hermann Hauser Announced as Patron of New Cambridge Computer Museum
A leading figure in the worlds of technology, science and business, Dr Hauser has agreed to take on this important role 30 years after the company he co-founded – Acorn Computers – unveiled the BBC Micro, the machine which, along with the Sinclair ZX Spectrum, epitomised the British home computer boom of the early 1980s.
Your BBC Micro Stories
With the BBC Micro turning 30 years old, The Centre for Computing History are asking people to send in their stories and anecdotes about using