Two of the most surprising aspects of the much overlooked magazine A&B COMPUTING magazine are (a) just how many programs each issue has stuffed in it, and (b) just how many of them work on both BBC and Electron machines. Until relatively recently, these programs seemed destined never to be played again - due to only being available in the printed format - but a summer session of blitz-typing them at EUG HQ has changed all that. Companion discs to accompany almost all of your A&B magazines are now available free from www.8bs.com; this disc is only one of them.
A&B 3.01 was originally published over fifteen years ago, very much in the "Golden Days" of the Beeb when new software was appearing every
month and hardware enthusiasts were pushing all manner of gadgets into the machines' expansion ports. To reinforce this, the cover of the magazine even boasts the message "For BBC Micro, Electron and Torch Users"; the Torch, of course, having such a limited lifetime that many Acorn users are unaware that it existed. [For more info on the Torch, see the MICROMART feature published in EUG #60 - Ed]
For all of its quantitative value (This particular issue is 130 pages
thick which, at £1.50, was certainly value for money!) and nice presentation throughout though, it's fair to say that A&B was a magazine which "never looked back" (sometimes to the exasperation of readers with older machines). This issue is fairly typical; the magazine is awash with 'news' items that are cloaked advertisements for the new products from companies such as BEEBUGSOFT, ACP and LEVEL 9 - on top of the actual full-page advertisements themselves that appear elsewhere! - in its opening pages. Redressing the balance come huge and frank reviews of STRIKE FORCE HARRIER, the CHALLENGER 3 disc drive, the Electron with Plus 1 and Plus 3, the ARIES B12 ROM, the UMI 2B music package and AMX ART, all complete with colourful screenshots. On top of these are the mailbag, educational software and arcade software sections where cursory glances are cast over less worthy yet recent products to hit the Beeb market. It's all sporadically intersected with software and hardware listings for the reader to 'type up' if they're interested in that particular area.
That's not to say, however, that the same care is taken with page-setting the listings as it so obviously is with the articles. Programs invariably come from the readers of A&B and their programming skills, and descriptions of what their program does, are patently hard to fathom. The series on simple animation in this issue includes a small "Snake" demo with bizarre statements like COLOUR 128+3 (COLOUR 131 is much simpler!) and the program itself is less than inspiring for would-be programmers when executed.
The most fascinating inclusion in this particular issue is a platformer named GHOSTS, suitable for all series. Fascinating for a number of reasons, readers of the original magazine will however find that, after spending hours typing it in (It's almost 100% machine code!), they are unable to play it by following the instructions in the GHOSTS article because (a) they don't know what they are waffling on about, and (b) a whole section of the listing has been chopped off during the 'pasting' of the four sections into the magazine!