Posted January 27, 2016

sunshinecorp
Ordained Dudeist
Registered: Jul 2011
From Greece

toxicTom
Big Daddy
Registered: Feb 2009
From Germany
Posted January 27, 2016
I've done this. Not with the Spectrum and not in 1983, but a few years later for the C64. Recorded on tape with my stereo and played it back on the datasette. Since the tape heads of the stereo were adjusted a little different, the datasette tape head had to be fine tuned with a screwdriver every time when I was using tapes recorded from there. Also when I got tapes from other people. There was a little program to adjust the head (fortunately loading from diskette :-)). And the most important positions of the screw were marked with colored dots (the screw only had to be turned within a ~120° range for most tapes.

tfishell
Remorse: The List, if you like FPS psych horror
Registered: Oct 2010
From United States
Posted January 27, 2016

A brilliant thing.
Post edited January 27, 2016 by tfishell

Wishbone
Red herring
Registered: Oct 2008
From Denmark
Posted January 27, 2016
Ah yes, those were the days. I've never done it myself (I'm not sure it was ever done on Danish radio), but I did know that it happened.
On a related note, I know that it is possible to record your old C64 tapes to MP3s, and load them in an emulator "the old-fashioned way".
On a related note, I know that it is possible to record your old C64 tapes to MP3s, and load them in an emulator "the old-fashioned way".

OneFiercePuppy
Old and Cranky
Registered: May 2010
From United States
Posted January 27, 2016
Oh, good. Now I get to relive those nightmares of IP-over-Radio network implementations from the last 20 years. Thanks so <twitch> much ^_^
[url= Good times! Why, just a few years ago we had to integrate an IPoR (much less fun than RoIP) with a radio that only supported RIP as a routing protocol, and didn't use gateway of last resort! Amazing that people would make a radio in the 2010s with 1970s technology, but I guess that helps keep things interesting. Unlike this comment, which induced narcolepsy in anyone unfortunate enough to read it. Sweet dreams...][/url]
[url= Good times! Why, just a few years ago we had to integrate an IPoR (much less fun than RoIP) with a radio that only supported RIP as a routing protocol, and didn't use gateway of last resort! Amazing that people would make a radio in the 2010s with 1970s technology, but I guess that helps keep things interesting. Unlike this comment, which induced narcolepsy in anyone unfortunate enough to read it. Sweet dreams...][/url]

Vythonaut
Per aspera ad astra
Registered: Jun 2014
From Greece
Posted January 27, 2016
Nice article, thanks for sharing it!

Maighstir
THIS KNIGHT MISLIKES THESE HEIGHTS
Registered: Nov 2008
From Sweden
Posted January 27, 2016
I'm fairly certain it happened on Swedish radio, though I never took part of it as I never had a computer using tape, and I don't remember having heard that any of my friends recorded from such programs either.

Cavenagh
Homeless
Registered: Aug 2014
From United Kingdom
Posted January 27, 2016
They used to play C64 / Spectrum games on Chan4 TV [when it was off air] many moons ago, which you recorded onto tape, The BBC ceefax had games for BBC / Acorn.
They also did this
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wKmu68URUeI
They also did this
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wKmu68URUeI
Post edited January 27, 2016 by Cavenagh

muntdefems
How appropriate. You fight like a cow.
Registered: Jul 2014
From Poland
Posted January 27, 2016
Back in the day, we sure used to... eeeh... "make safety copies" of ZX Spectrum and Amstrad CPC games with a double deck cassette recorder (even though the success rate was about 50% if we were lucky), but I never heard of (and it would've never occurred to me to) actually broadcasting these kind of games over the radio. :D

sunshinecorp
Ordained Dudeist
Registered: Jul 2011
From Greece
Posted January 27, 2016

A brilliant thing.
