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Jonathan M. "Joffa" Smith (1 February 1967 – 26 June 2010) was a British games programmer, best known for his titles for the ZX Spectrum.His games [1] were notable for containing a large number of sprites and parallax scrolling.
Rig control companion program Flarq: Automatic Repeat reQuest companion program for Fldigi GNU Radio: GPL: Windows, macOS, Linux: software-defined radio and signal processing SDRangel: GPL: Windows, macOS, Linux: software-defined radio SDR# Freeware Windows software-defined radio receiver SDR++: GPL: Windows, macOS, Linux, Android: software ...
Falcon 3.0 sold 400,000 copies by March 1995. [1] Including its expansions, the full "Falcon 3.0 line" surpassed 700,000 copies in sales by December 1998. [2]According to GameSpot, Falcon 3.0 sold well for years after its initial release, and add-on products extended its longevity.
Spektrum is a brand of radio control systems designed for use with hobby radio-controlled cars and aircraft. Spektrum is a division of Horizon Hobby . The R/C hobby in the United States, Japan, and Europe typically used to employ FM radio control in HF and VHF bands such as 27 MHz, 35 MHz, 49 MHz, and 72 MHz.
In August 1981, the analog equivalent of the first program, Circuit Designer and Simulator, was released. Its integrated text editor created circuit descriptions for a simple, linear, analog simulator. September 1982 saw the release of the first Micro-Cap package as a successor to the Circuit Designer and Simulator. 1982 Micro-Cap; 1984 Micro-Cap 2
XEphem started as a Unix and Motif conversion of the IBM PC-based ephem.It was initially released in December 1993 with version 2.5. [citation needed] Its commercial edition was discontinued in 2016; the free version continued to be offered as proprietary software. [3]
The ZX Spectrum (UK: / z ɛ d ɛ k s /) is an 8-bit home computer developed and marketed by Sinclair Research.One of the most influential computers ever made and one of the all-time bestselling British computers, with over five million units sold.
William C. "Bill" Stewart (1950 – August 2009) was an American computer programmer.. Stewart was born in Memphis, Tennessee.He founded Stewart Software Company there in 1984 and marketed Zilog Z80 assembly language programs, notably TOOLKIT and the ONLINE 80 Bulletin Board System, for Radio Shack TRS-80 Computers running TRSDOS.