%OP%BOY %OP%PL70 %OP%HM0 %OP%BM12 %OP%LM5 %OP%FO//- @P@ -// %CO:A,5,72% {1. {2. {3. {4. {5. {6. {6a. {fn {fn {fn {fn {fn {fn {fn {fn %CO:B,70,75%%H1%CAMBRIDGE COMPUTER Z88%H1% %H4%%H1%Introduction, and Footnoting Demonstration Document%H1%%H4% ^For sheer portability, no computer approaches the Cambridge Computer Z88.<1> What else can you say when the machine weighs less than 2lbs - which is %H1%much%H1% less than 1kg - and measures about the size of an A4 pad?} Others, strictly speaking, are smaller, but they are hand-held and not convenient for proper typing.<2> E.g., the Psion Organiser.} Others again will be said to have the advantages of built-in disk drives, an 80x24 screen (backlit!), and MS-DOS compatibility. Whether these are %H1%real%H1% advantages is a moot question, but they certainly do not enhance portability or, even more obviously, lap-top operation.<3> The Toshiba 1000 is only just over twice the weight of the Z88, has a reasonable battery life, and costs about the same. But with a single 3.5" disk drive, it must take forever to boot up, compared with instant availability of files and programs on the Z88. As for the new (unavailable in Australia?) NEC Ultralite, one can only point out that it costs about 4 times the Z88 for about as much in the way of built-in facilities - and no disk drive.} Of the 12-18lbs arm stretchers which claim "lap-top" operation, the less said the better.<4> No names, no pack drill. Most of these, though they have all the gas plasma and bells and whistles in the world, either run only on mains power or have rechargeable batteries of a derisorily short life.} ^But - someone might say - what can such a small, light machine offer? Must it not be so limited in features as to be more of a toy than a working computer?<5> Something the same was said of the Tandy Model 100 when it appeared in 1983. That was unfair enough. But the Model 100 and NEC 8201 were made into powerful instruments by courtesy of third party providers who saw their potential. Now read on about the Z88 ....} The immediate and unequivocal answer is: "Nothing of the sort". The Z88, in its basic form, contains ROM software which makes it instantly available for sophisticated use; and its operating system<6> This is named "OZ". Could it be that Sir Clive Sinclair designed it for special advertisement in Australia? Well, hardly - but a clever advertiser could make something of it.} and construction allow for extraordinarily powerful expansion. And before going any further, one should say that the first, and, in my opinion, the essential expansion one should get is RAM. The basic machine has only 32k - shades of the old Kyocera models - of which some 24k is left after operating system requirements are met. That is not enough for anything but your diary and perhaps some expenses, etc. At least 128k extra can and should be purchased. It will be pushed into one of three slots at the front of the Z88. It makes a lot of difference. The cost is a difference also, but not by much. ^Supposing, then, that your Z88 begins its service for you with 128+24k of memory. You might well be first attracted to the calendar and diary, which are linked to each other and to a clock and alarm.<6a> It would not be wise to rely on the alarm to wake you up: the sound is pretty slight, though it can be made to repeat indefinitely if you wish. The alarm's true purpose is to remind you of appointments or obligations while you are working with the computer; it can also run programs.} The manual is reasonably clear and comprehensive about all these, and once you have set the time and date (in English, not American, format for once, unless you care to change it) you can enter your engagements and other dates to remember in any form you wish and search the diary, printing it out or just viewing it, at will. It is a powerful and flexible application which can be used for any date between 1753 and the middle of next century. ^The central program of the Z88 is the whimsically named "Pipedream". It is a word processor. It is a spreadsheet. It is a database. It is all these at once. For this reason, it comes as a shock to first-time users, who have in mind either something like Wordstar, or something like VisiCalc. At first, it can be a peculiar feeling to use a word processor which (as someone said) thinks it is a spreadsheet. But you soon find that a little bit of preparation makes Pipedream look just like another word processor. another word processor: It still has little peculiarities, but they are easily accommodated.} ^Pipedream as a spreadsheet is just about all that one can ask for. can ask for: A version of Pipedream has been written for IBM PC compatibles. Its spreadsheet functions are even more extensive than those in the Z88. But it is worth mentioning that, by installing Pipedream in a PC, the Z88 is made to that extent compatible with the PC. More on that later.} I won't say more, because a spreadsheet is a spreadsheet is a spreadsheet. But here it is also, if you wish, a simple database, because text can be mixed with numbers by using the columns, and the program will search or sort on any field. However, it will not sort unless you keep your fields together in the one row. As a result, no field can be more than 254 characters in length. ^Whichever mode is your choice, or whichever application you use, you need to be able to see what you put into the computer. The screen is therefore important. The Z88 has a blue on grey supertwist LCD of eight lines, each of which can be, if you wish, as long as 100 characters. In practice, you will keep your text (for word processing) to about 70 characters. The remaining right hand portion of the screen can then be devoted to the optional "map" of your page. It comprises pixel dots, one per character, so that you can see the shape of your paragraphs. your paragraphs: Like various other options, such as whether you want the keys to make a little sound as you type, the "time out", the serial baud rates, and default directories, the map is turned on or off in a "popdown" called the Panel.} This is a dynamic display: it changes as you type. You thus have an advantage over almost any other computer user. ^That will probably do as an introduction to the beauties of the Z88. But it doesn't in fact stop there. By purchasing third party software, and some hardware, the machine can be made yet more powerful and convenient. It is almost all on EPROM cards which, when inserted in the slots provided - and alternated in those slots if need be - add extra ROM. There is a particularly good linking program for the Macintosh range of computers, and others for PC compatibles, BBC and Amstrad. There is a powerful database manager and language highly reminiscent of dBASE II, dBASE II: Its power is largely dependent on copious use of memory. For serious Zbase (yes, that's the name) use, I recommend RAM expansion to 512k.} a tape backup system, a communications program which includes the ability to access Viatel and other such videotex services (quite a feat on an 8 line screen), and an outliner program called Thinkz. called Thinkz: It is not yet released. It is on the lines of ThinkTank.} I believe this to be potentially a best-seller. It should have the sort of use described thus: ^In addition to basic tasks - organizing articles and reports, everyday kinds of project management and to-do lists - creative people are using idea processors for everything from setting up new businesses to documenting data bases to planning travel itineraries. And outlines can be used as templates of often-used procedures ... often-used procedures: Denise Caruso in %H4%Personal Computing%H4%, 10 (September 1986), p.80.} ^There is also a spelling checker of 65,000 words (NOT American spelling<>), American spelling: Spellmaster does, however, now come in an American version, if you happen to be a U.S. Z88er.} which will also solve crosswords. A growing number of BASIC (BBC BASIC, Z88 version) programs is also available. ^This paper has been written in part as a demonstration of a particular implementation of a Z88 facility which is unique. By employing the Command Line Interpreter (CLI), it is possible to give Pipedream a facility which it otherwise lacks - viz., the ability to accept embedded footnotes in a piece of text, which are then to be "thrown" to the end of the document and saved as a separate document, having first been renumbered along with the indices in the text. Briefly, the CLI takes a plain text file, in which various symbols are placed to represent keystrokes, and carries out the operations controlled by those keystrokes. those keystrokes: It does other things as well, but the mysteries can get too much for me.} Repetitive operations in particular can thus be automated, as this file will demonstrate. %CO:C,12,36%%CO:D,12,24%%CO:E,12,12%%CO:F,12,0%