29 февраля 1996 |
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* PART 5 - EMULATE LETTERS *
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Do you know of a Sinclair QL emulator for
the PC? I'd really like to get hold of
one. If you do, perhaps you could give me
details of how I can get it. Thanks,
N Wittering
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There is not, as far as I know, a QL
emulator for the PC. However, there is a
large amount of resources for the Sinclair
QL on the web if you know where to look. I
have expanded the Internet section of the
magazine, adding more QL sites for those
interested and also the location of the QL
FAQ. If there is an emulator for the QL
out there (PC), please let me know!!
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Just a quick note to congratulate you on a
great magazine. I've just come across the
spectrum emulator stuff on the internet,
and at the moment I'm having a great time
playing old classics like JetPac and Manic
Miner. I bought my 16K spectrum back in
1983, and upgraded to a mammoth 48K a
couple of years later. Now I have the best
parts of this computer, without the dodgy
ariel lead or the games that wouldnt load
until my volume/tone settings were
_exactly_ correct. Keep up the great work,
Rick Bishop
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Having an emulator does take some of the
pain of loading games away, as we know
they are virtually all going to load
properly. But...sniff...it also takes away
some of the magic of the Speccy...!
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I've just been reading your fantastic
'e-zine'. What a "blast from the past" it
has been. To me, as I am sure to so many
people, the Spectrum evokes feelings of a
time when computers were exciting and
*cheap* and available to the masses. I
never actually owned a Spectrum, but my
friend had one, and we spent many a long
hour playing the latest games, typing in
games from C&VG (Remember when they were a
"computer" mag ?), and just mucking about.
Reading your 'e-zine' brings back many
happy memories, and not only about the
Spectrum. (I was a lot younger then ;) )
My first computer was the Amiga 500,
bought at a time when they cost 500. I
then went on to an Acorn A310M, A500, and
now the latest RiscPC. So what now!? Well,
I've just to get hold of a Spectrum
emulator so that I can relive a mispent
youth. As Boris Donko says, your'e-zine'
is part of the buzz.
Well done on an excellent magazine, keep
up the good work!
Paul Irvine
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This is sort of a followup to some
comments in Issue 4.
What people seem to want is a sort
stand-alone (for their machine) executable
version of emulate (or failing that a
common format that can be read by all)
Of course until people wanted embedded
pictures... the current format is ideal,
although the HTML version is nice for
browsing.
I have made a quick look through most of
the relevant sites and have found that
there is no common hypertext format...
So it looks like someone should write
one... Although if you have the cash you
could try Adobe PDF although that may
annoy those amiga owners...
Ben Baylis
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After my comments in a previous issue, I
have has quite a few suggestions as to
what to do with the magazine (some of them
unprintable....only kidding!) It is hard
to find a modern computer platform to use,
as if I opt for a PC display, other
computer owners would be left out and vice
versa. It is possible that in the near
future I will be producing a version of
Emulate in the form of a Spectrum file, as
all the computers have an emulator and it
seems the only "universal" thing to use!
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Hey! Alright there? I'm a twenty two year
old english student at sheffield
university with too much time on his
hands. A year ago, in the middle of a big
remeniscence with my house mate about the
speccy, she admitted she still, actually
had hers in the loft at her mums house.
Thats how it began. I thought I'd left it
all behind me in 1988 but no. These days
myself and all my friends spend too much
of our spare time playing bloody Arkanoid
and Operation Wolf. Anyway, I wondered if
you could count me as a subscriber to
emulate, and if you might be able to tell
me where if poss I could buy old speecy
games in their original taped format. I
don't have an emulator or anything,
neither am I particularly computer
literate, I just get allowed to use the
pc's for writing up essays for the most
part. That's very much for your time,
anyway! Hope to hear from you, I guess!
Rob Barker
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You can find games on tapes at second hand
shops and boot sales, where you can pick
up cheap lots of games quite cheap. It
might also be worth checking classified
ads. You could also find someone with an
emulator and use the TAP2VOC utility which
transfers TAP files back onto tape.
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More letters next issue...
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