1982 adverts
NEC
November 1982
NEC turns 28 years of computer experience to your personal advantage
NEC's PC-8000 - known as the PC-8001 outside of Europe - was part of NEC's PC-8000 range. It was only the third fully-assembled microcomputer specifically made for the Japanese market, being beaten only...
Gemini Micro
November 1982
The Galaxy 1 Computer - The cost-effective solution to your computer needs
The Galaxy 1, from Amersham-based Gemini Microcomputers, was a Z80 - or actually twin Z80, with one just to do the video - microcomputer which was based around the company's older multiboard system. ...
Sord/CGL
November 1982
PIPS: We've cracked the BASIC problem
Sord, which had been selling its M100 and M200 business-focused micros in the UK since the early part of 1979, is here advertising software rather than any of its actual hardware, but that's probably...
LSI
November 1982
Britain can still find an extra byte
Here's an advert from the curiously-named Computer Ancilliaries Limited, for what at first appear to be two of its machines - the British-built Caltext Word Processor and the Caltext Micro - but which...
LSI
November 1982
A 16-bit and an 8-bit micro all in the same compact unit
LSI, which sometimes made the claim to be the UK's biggest micro manufacturer, is back with an update to its System M-Three - a machine which was also popular as an OEM model, showing up as the British...
Commodore
17th November 1982
Your starter for £150 - the Commodore VIC-20
Commodore was fairly unconventional in its approach to selling computers: rather than just using the traditional tech outlets like Radio Shack, or electronics and nerd magazines, it elected to also sell...
Microsoft
December 1982
Microsoft: MS-DOS gives you the only complete set of tools for 16-bit systems
If there was once company that, for good or bad, has influenced the early home and business computer industry more than any other, it has to be Microsoft. Formed in 1975 in Alberquerque, New Mexico,...
British Micro
December 1982
British Micro: Now Other Micros Are Less Than Perfect
At first sight this is another obscure entry in the who/what/where department, however British Micro was connected to the more famous Nascom and Gemini Microcomputer, both founded by John Marshall. The...
Sirius/Victor
December 1982
Victor 9000 - The All-Conquering Business System
Lightning and sensitive electronics is always such a great combination, and it's used to the max in this advert for the Victor 9000, a machine which was meant to have been a US-only version of the Sirius...
Camputers
December 1982
Camputers Lynx: How to increase the size of your memory
Camputers was formed in the winter of 1981 as Camtronic Circuits - a spin-off from GW Design Services, a company that had already provided PCB design services to Acorn for the Proton, aka BBC Micro. ...
Toshiba
December 1982
Toshiba T-200: Reliable hardware is not enough
Long before Toshiba had the "Hello Tosh, Got a Toshiba?" line with its laptops and a couple of years before it joined the Microsoft-backed MSX attempt to set a new standard in hardware comes this advert...
EACA/Genie
December 1982
Colour Genie Does It All!
The EG2000, or Colour Genie, was released at about the same time as EACA International's update to its original 1981 monster computer, the Video Genie. By now known as the Genie I (with built-in tape)...
Durango
December 1982
Durango: See our intelligent little space conqueror and you'll know why he's green
This advert, which features a green Mekon - the alien character from British 1950s comic Dan Dare - is for one of the least computer-ey micros in the entire collection: the Durango 700, distributed in...
Atari
December 1982
Atari Star Raiders: New game, private property
This "advert", which appeared in the pre-Christmas edition of Personal Computer World and which encourages infringers to write to Graham Daubney - who would later become director of developments for Spectrum...
Transtec
December 1982
Transtec: If you can buy a business computer package at a lower price, I'll buy it for you
So says Noel C. May, the managing director of Transtec Computers in one of those advertising claims that would be great to know how often had to be fulfilled. The machine, known as the "BC2", was a...