ZX Spectrum: Difference between revisions
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Unfortunately had to rewrite article due to the unobjectiveness. But did save NewYinzer's work for reuse in my personal Annex OS-tan information page.
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(Unfortunately had to rewrite article due to the unobjectiveness. But did save NewYinzer's work for reuse in my personal Annex OS-tan information page.) |
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! Latest Stable Release: | ! Latest Stable Release: | ||
| | | ZX Spectrum +2B | ||
|} | |} | ||
At the time of this writing, the only known renditon of any ZX Spectrum model OS-tan is a representative catch-all for the entire ZX Spectrum line, including the ZX Spectrum+, 128, +2 and +3. The decision not to settle on any particular system was due to the lack of any clearly-defined internal operating system aside from the Sinclair BASIC programming language (although later models were capable of running [[DR-DOS|CP/M]]. | |||
She is depicted as a young adolescent girl, sweet and mild-mannered, but also radiating a playful and tacit wisdom indicative of her age and former popularity around the world. She wears glasses, has her sandy-blonde hair usually tied forward in long pigtails, and dons a vested brown uniform that alludes to her British origin. Her pleated skirt is alsoemblazend with the rainbow parallelogram that used to be the Spectrum logo. | |||
In addition to her base clothing, she also accessorizes with intentionally color-mismatched items, a reference to the Attribute Clashing which severely affected the original system and its software/games. The accessories will often be of divergent cultures as well, owing to the ZX Spectrum's popularity outside of 1980's Western markets, specifically in Brazil and the former Soviet Union. | |||
See also: | See also: | ||
*[[List of OS-tans]] | *[[List of OS-tans]] | ||
*[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zx_spectrum Wikipedia: ZX Spectrum] | |||
[[Category:Other]] | [[Category:Other]] |