Looks nice, however on laptop screens not all buttons are visible, it took a while to discover I could scroll to find "Assemble and Run".
andromaton 3 hours ago [-]
thank you. will or have fixed :)
SanjayMehta 1 days ago [-]
I still have my zx-81, it powers up but the keyboard membrane is long gone. Learnt z80 assembly on it. Good times.
stephbu 1 days ago [-]
Yeah me too in 1982, using the Melbourne House Z80 reference, aged a young 10 years old. Working with POKE and no macro-assembler, I wrote mnemonics then translated them to machine-code by hand. A baptism of fire that to this day that I've not forgotten.
ZX Renew sells replacement membranes for £12 if you want to get it in working order.
YZF 1 days ago [-]
I have my ZX-81 (with the 16KB expansion pack) and my ZX-Spectrum (with a microdrive). I think they're in working condition though they haven't been powered up like in 30+ years.
rwmj 21 hours ago [-]
Don't just plug it in! The power supply and/or VRM can fail in ways that deliver bad voltages to components. You might want to watch some of Lee's[1] videos first on how to bring up a ZX81 safely, or ask in his discord community for more help.
That is why my Timex 2068 has never left the box since around 1990.
Better admire for what it was and use an emulator instead.
JdeBP 24 hours ago [-]
Watching the retrocomputing enthusiasts, apart from obvious things like water damage, it seems that the first thing that one always has to check before attempting to power up is capacitors. A generalism true for all old electronics, rather than Sinclair-specific.
actionfromafar 23 hours ago [-]
And always assume the C64 power supply will fry the computer. It fails over time by raising the output voltage.
GPerson 15 hours ago [-]
Fast / slow mode breaks “Space Invader” by the way.
andromaton 3 hours ago [-]
if by break you mean you can't see the action, that's by design :)
otherwise, pls let me know.
GPerson 20 hours ago [-]
Can you say what parts Claude was used for to speed this up?
xnorswap 18 hours ago [-]
My guess is most of it? This commit message for example sounds very much like a Claude result:
Add Space Invaders game implementation in assembly language
- Implemented the core game logic including player movement, missile firing, and invader behavior.
- Added collision detection for missiles and bombs.
- Included game state management for win/lose conditions and restarting the game.
- Created functions for drawing game elements on the screen and handling keyboard input.
- Defined constants and variables for game configuration and state tracking.
That last one in particular is exactly the kind of update you get from claude, it doesn't sound very human. "Constants and variables" eh? Not just constants or variables, but constants and variables.
Helpful, but not. Detailed, but not.
andromaton 3 hours ago [-]
rule #1 of ai programming: read and approve everything before accept.
rule #2 do not let it write commit messages - i did not know notice that until many commits later. they are horrible. change 10 things - writes about the last one, too peppy too.
andromaton 3 hours ago [-]
95% of it.
It's a power tool.
empressplay 1 days ago [-]
Cool stuff! My first computer was the Timex Sinclair 1000 (when I was 6). Good times!
We did something similar for the Apple II, to compile Merlin assembly into a running emulator instance:
An interesting observation. It prompts the thought of how far away this simulator is from an actual ZX81, and how much it has been pulled away from a ZX81 by dint of training data where simulated retrocomputers of other types all boot into copyright messages. I wonder how often the spicy autocomplete engine tried to make it put up a "READY" or "OK" prompt.
One ZX81 clone actually did have a "READY" prompt, I read. Actual intelligence was doing the same in the 1980s. (-:
Rendered at 09:02:34 GMT+0000 (Coordinated Universal Time) with Vercel.
https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/spectrumnext/zx-spectru...
This book was the ignition that changed my life... https://archive.org/details/z-80-reference-guide-alan-tullya...
[1] https://www.youtube.com/@MoreFunMakingIt/videos
Better admire for what it was and use an emulator instead.
Helpful, but not. Detailed, but not.
We did something similar for the Apple II, to compile Merlin assembly into a running emulator instance:
https://paleotronic.com/merlinplus/
One ZX81 clone actually did have a "READY" prompt, I read. Actual intelligence was doing the same in the 1980s. (-: