There's also a lot of rebuking Uncle Clive's fake news in the various letter and news pages. One thing I saw that was interesting, is that Sinclair offered
schools a free ZX Printer for every Spectrum schools bought, and Acorn offered
"free Econet" for the BBC. The latter was seen as "far more likely to be useful in the future" - yeah, but no but.
There's also a lot of rebuking Uncle Clive's fake news in the various letter and news pages. One thing I saw that was interesting, is that Sinclair offered
schools a free ZX Printer for every Spectrum schools bought, and Acorn offered
"free Econet" for the BBC. The latter was seen as "far more likely to be useful in the future" - yeah, but no but.
On 18/11/2019 16:43, deKay wrote:
There's also a lot of rebuking Uncle Clive's fake news in the various letter >> and news pages. One thing I saw that was interesting, is that Sinclair offered
schools a free ZX Printer for every Spectrum schools bought, and Acorn offered
"free Econet" for the BBC. The latter was seen as "far more likely to be
useful in the future" - yeah, but no but.
With Econet the school could buy an actual printer and and hook it up to
one of their Beebs. I love the ingenuity of the ZX Printer but it's not >actually *useful*. Plus they'd have to buy the expensive paper.
Econet for anything else wasn't of any use to schools.
I've been in schools pretty much all my life and only know of one
where Econet ever happened and that was never used
as when they connected it up it was used solely to remotely call the
teacher a dick.
Networking was important, but Econet itself was effectively a dead
end
the Beebs were used for just 1) Granny's Garden, and 2) Logo.
no schools bought Spectrums
OK. I'll bite. ;-)
Econet for anything else wasn't of any use to schools.
So myself and colleagues were living in a dream for a decade.
I've been in schools pretty much all my life and only know of one
where Econet ever happened and that was never used
Your ignorance of what was actually happening is staggering, then.
as when they connected it up it was used solely to remotely call the
teacher a dick.
Thousands of pupils and never any abuse. It is like all networks, it
needs managing.
Networking was important, but Econet itself was effectively a dead
end
Well, yes, but when Ethernet systems were horrendously expensive and
tricky to set up with co-ax cabling, Econet was very effective, cheap
and simple.
the Beebs were used for just 1) Granny's Garden, and 2) Logo.
Ignorance is bliss.
no schools bought Spectrums
Fewer, true, but they were used and networked, sort of. However, they
soon became too limiting, whereas the Beeb was still very useful into
the mid 90s.
True, but what use was it in school? Genuine question. What was it
actually used for? Lucky schools had maybe one BBC per room, perhaps
maybe only a handful across the whole school. My own primary had two,
one in a "learning room" and one on a trolley. Another primary I went
to had a "computer room" with four BBCs in it but none elsewhere. Not
much scope to network them.
On Wed, 20 Nov 2019 14:05:11 +0000
deKay <andyk@lofi-gaming.org.uk> wrote:
True, but what use was it in school? Genuine question. What was it
actually used for? Lucky schools had maybe one BBC per room, perhaps
maybe only a handful across the whole school. My own primary had two,
one in a "learning room" and one on a trolley. Another primary I went
to had a "computer room" with four BBCs in it but none elsewhere. Not
much scope to network them.
My experience is a lot more limited, but I have to say that the school
I went to, being a bit posh, had 12-15 BBCs in one room (and a few more dotted about the place), but no Econet.
(We had quite a few Commodore PETs, too. I was about to say I'd
love to know what happened to those, but on reflection I'm not sure I
do. Probably ended up in a skip.)
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