I got a printer and a tape interface for my 4-bit BASIC computer/pocket calculator Sharp PC-1248. I love this little toy because it has far more RAM than most users would ever need - almost 8K is available to the user. The printer is quick and tiny, too. The computer runs 150 hours from two CR2032, and the printer is powered by four AA batteries with unknown yet runtime.

Here's the device loading the program and printing the image. Sorry it's very blurry, I'm too excited to share it ASAP :D

If you're wondering why I needed a printer for this computer: well, first, it's cool, and second, the computer can record the programs to a tape without this device, but can't load them. I tried to build my own version of the cassette tape interface for it from scraps a couple of weeks ago, but it didn't work for some reason. Probably the signal was too quiet.

If you ever find yourself owning this little computer, here are some very useful resources:

Basic->WAV converter (comes with source codes):
https://www.peil-partner.de/ifhe.de/sharp/

DIY tape interface (you can't just load tapes from the device without it, only save): https://ht-deko.com/pokecom/bbce124.html

Printer emulator using Arduino: http://www.cavefischer.at/spc/html/CE-126P_Emulator.html#PC-1250A

Now that I have this wonder of portable personal computing in its final form, I need to think: what kind of computing I can do on a 4-bit BASIC computer (read: slow) with a super bad keyboard (read: worse than ZX81) and a screen of 16 characters (e.g. most output goes to a printer right away)? And the IO is limited to a tape and a printer.

There's enough RAM to run a simple text editor, but the keyboard is a pain, so I'd rather not. Simple spreadsheet app is feasible, but I might as well just use BASIC. A database app would require some clever sharding. It could work as an organiser for 100 notes/contacts, but this is better done by a sheet of paper hidden in the back cover of the computer.

What do I even do with you, o little computer?

It's obviously very useful for little programs like "enter your mortgage details and we'll print the payment schedule, taking compound interest into account" or "type in the colours of the stripes on your resistor and it'll print out the resistance". But what else?

I guess very few people bought such pocket computers / BASIC calculators to play video games, but I think it's going to be pretty good for all sorts of little games. I'm sure even a decent game of chess is very well achievable with 8K of RAM for BASIC.

Sadly, the device can't play music, and its serial port is a bit wonky, so even controlling MIDI through it might be a bit too much 🤔

Accessing BBSes is also out of the question; the screen is too tiny, and the serial port can't be used with the printer connected. Maybe it is possible to use a phone line to transmit programs/data over it as if its a tape recorder, but I doubt it'll work.

I found a reasonable application for this pocket computer. Imagine you're doing a book club with a small number of visitors every time (5-10 people). You want to collect everyone's feedback about the club. Printing 500 copies of the form for the next year is annoying, and you'd have to write down the name of the book you're reading, the current date and the next date for every event. You also might realise, after using 50 forms, that the form is missing an important question or something.

This little computer is almost perfect for those small-scale print jobs. You type the form one, and you can get as many copies as you need (well, up to 100 copies from four batteries, unless you have a wall plug).

Sorry for messing up the string variables :D

@nina_kali_nina

I used something similar at a structural engineering firm back in the 90s, albeit a Casio. One of the partners wrote a beam design program on it. They had a bunch of them for the engineers but they were starting to fail. One of my jobs when I joined was rewriting it for a PC with Visual Basic to preserve the program. It would have been easy except there was a mistake in the maths but the partner wouldn't accept it and kept demanding why the new program gave different numbers 🙄

@nina_kali_nina
I wanted one of those pocket computers so much when I was a kid.
Especially the one that ran Lisp rather than basic.
@kirtai til Casio AI-1000 with Lisp and AI^w PROLOG