By the way, if you want to know what was a ZX Microdrive... DON'T use Google. It's plagued with disinformation and fake news.

Use Wikipedia for now.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/ZX_Microdrive

#retrocomputing #ZXSpectrum #ZXMicrodrive #Microdrive #Speccy #Spectrum

ZX Microdrive - Wikipedia

@muzej There should be some #Sinclair #ZXMicrodrive "cartridges" in one of my cupboards...

Were any #Spectrum games released on #ZXMicroDrive?
Someone on Reddit confused cassette tapes and ROM cartridges ("tape cartridges"). To the best of my knowledge no games were released on tape cartridges, and I only know of software on ZX MicroDrive tape carts, but now I must know!

#SinclairZXSpectrum #Retrodon #RetroComputing

I take offence at Sinclair's ZX Microdrives being called "odd" 🤣 They were a magisterial class on how not to design mass storage devices.
https://hackaday.com/2023/07/29/a-modern-replacement-for-the-zx-spectrums-odd-tape-storage-system/

#ZxSpectrum #Spectrum #Speccy #ZxMicrodrive #microdrive #storage #retrocomputing

A Modern Replacement For The ZX Spectrum’s Odd Tape Storage System

Unless you were lucky enough to be able to afford a floppy disk drive, you probably used cassette tapes to store programs and data if you used pretty much any home computer in the 1980s. ZX Spectru…

Hackaday
A Modern Replacement For The ZX Spectrum’s Odd Tape Storage System

Unless you were lucky enough to be able to afford a floppy disk drive, you probably used cassette tapes to store programs and data if you used pretty much any home computer in the 1980s. ZX Spectru…

Hackaday

A Redesigned ZX Spectrum Desktop Computer That Works Surprisingly Well

Retrocomputer enthusiasts will quite often be found pondering the great what ifs of their hobby. What if Commodore had had a half-way decent marketing division is a popular one, but the notoriously penny-pinching ways of Sinclair Research are also a plentiful source. What if Sinclair had won the competition for a computer in UK schools, not only the first time around when Acorn's BBC Micro scooped the prize, but also what if they'd entered the fray once more in 1983 when there was another chance? [10p6] investigates this possibility, and comes up with a Spectrum desktop computer that you can see in the video below the break.

The first two-thirds of the video is devoted to renders which, while pretty to look at, offer nothing of substance. In the later part though we see a build, putting a Spectrum 48k board, Interface 1, and two Microdrives in a slimline case along with a power supply. Meanwhile a ZX rubber keyboard is mounted stand-alone on the end of a cable. It's a computer that we know would have been an object of desire for many kids back in the day, and we agree with the video that it could have been integrated onto one board without the need for a separate Interface 1. We feel it's inevitable though that Sinclair's cost-cutting would have caused something to go astray and there would certainly have been only one Microdrive, even though we like that separate keyboard a lot.

They claim that the STLs will be available from a Facebook group, however unless you happen to have a set of Microdrives and an Interface 1 to go with your Spectrum that you're prepared to butcher for the project we're guessing that the chief interest lies in watching it unfold and that some of the ideas might translate to other platforms. Meanwhile if you're interested in the Microdrive, we did a teardown on them last year.

#retrocomputing #sinclair #zxmicrodrive #zxspectrum

A Redesigned ZX Spectrum Desktop Computer That Works Surprisingly Well

Retrocomputer enthusiasts will quite often be found pondering the great what ifs of their hobby. What if Commodore had had a half-way decent marketing division is a popular one, but the notoriously…

Hackaday