Difference between revisions of "Locomotive Software"

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''Locomotive Software was a small British software house which did most of its development for Amstrad's home and small business computers of the 1980s.''
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'''Locomotive Software''' was a small British software house which did most of its development for Amstrad's home and small business computers of the 1980s.
  
''It wrote or contributed significantly to the ROMs of the Amstrad CPC 464, Amstrad CPC 664 and Amstrad CPC 6128 home computers, the Amstrad PCW wordprocessor and the later Amstrad-manufactured ZX Spectrum +2A, +2B and +3 machines, amongst others. Its [[Locomotive BASIC]] for the CPC range was fast and highly-featured implementation of BASIC for the time and later led to the development of Mallard BASIC for Amstrad's CP/M+ machines. Locomotive was also responsible for the ports of the CP/M operating system to Amstrad machines - initially 2.2 for the CPC464 and CPC664 and later CP/M 3.0 ("CP/M+") for the CPC6128, PCW range and Spectrum +3.''
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It wrote or contributed significantly to the ROMs of the Amstrad CPC 464, Amstrad CPC 664 and Amstrad CPC 6128 home computers, the Amstrad PCW wordprocessor and the later Amstrad-manufactured ZX Spectrum +2A, +2B and +3 machines, amongst others. Its [[Locomotive BASIC]] for the CPC range was fast and highly-featured implementation of BASIC for the time and later led to the development of Mallard BASIC for Amstrad's CP/M+ machines. Locomotive was also responsible for the ports of the CP/M operating system to Amstrad machines - initially 2.2 for the CPC464 and CPC664 and later CP/M 3.0 ("CP/M+") for the CPC6128, PCW range and Spectrum +3.
  
''A later Locomotive BASIC was BASIC2 for Digital Research's GEM GUI, as supplied with the Amstrad PC-1512 and PC-1640 range of PC clones.''
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A later Locomotive BASIC was BASIC2 for Digital Research's GEM GUI, as supplied with the Amstrad PC-1512 and PC-1640 range of PC clones.
  
''The company also developed the LocoScript word processor for the PCW, which was a complete bootable environment in its own right with no separate underlying operating system. The company later produced a PC version of this software but it was not hugely successful - partly because it was a DOS application, just as the PC market was moving to Microsoft Windows, but also because in the more competitive environment of PC wordprocessors the program compared poorly to incumbents such as WordPerfect.''
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The company also developed the LocoScript word processor for the PCW, which was a complete bootable environment in its own right with no separate underlying operating system. The company later produced a PC version of this software but it was not hugely successful - partly because it was a DOS application, just as the PC market was moving to Microsoft Windows, but also because in the more competitive environment of PC wordprocessors the program compared poorly to incumbents such as WordPerfect.
  
''The same team later went on to develop the Turnpike Internet client for Windows, which was for many years distributed as their standard access software by pioneering dial-up Internet access provider Demon Internet.''
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The same team later went on to develop the Turnpike Internet client for Windows, which was for many years distributed as their standard access software by pioneering dial-up Internet access provider Demon Internet.
  
''The company still exists in partial form, continuing to sell the LocoScript software.''
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The company still exists in partial form, continuing to sell the LocoScript software. One interesting thing is, that they didn't change their company logo for more than 20 years.
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== Web links ==
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* [http://www.locoscript.com/ LocoScript homepage]
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* [http://www.locomotive.com/ old Locomotive Software domain]
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* [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Locomotive_Software Information at Wikipedia]

Revision as of 11:48, 6 September 2006

(Copied from Wikipedia)

Locomotive Software was a small British software house which did most of its development for Amstrad's home and small business computers of the 1980s.

It wrote or contributed significantly to the ROMs of the Amstrad CPC 464, Amstrad CPC 664 and Amstrad CPC 6128 home computers, the Amstrad PCW wordprocessor and the later Amstrad-manufactured ZX Spectrum +2A, +2B and +3 machines, amongst others. Its Locomotive BASIC for the CPC range was fast and highly-featured implementation of BASIC for the time and later led to the development of Mallard BASIC for Amstrad's CP/M+ machines. Locomotive was also responsible for the ports of the CP/M operating system to Amstrad machines - initially 2.2 for the CPC464 and CPC664 and later CP/M 3.0 ("CP/M+") for the CPC6128, PCW range and Spectrum +3.

A later Locomotive BASIC was BASIC2 for Digital Research's GEM GUI, as supplied with the Amstrad PC-1512 and PC-1640 range of PC clones.

The company also developed the LocoScript word processor for the PCW, which was a complete bootable environment in its own right with no separate underlying operating system. The company later produced a PC version of this software but it was not hugely successful - partly because it was a DOS application, just as the PC market was moving to Microsoft Windows, but also because in the more competitive environment of PC wordprocessors the program compared poorly to incumbents such as WordPerfect.

The same team later went on to develop the Turnpike Internet client for Windows, which was for many years distributed as their standard access software by pioneering dial-up Internet access provider Demon Internet.

The company still exists in partial form, continuing to sell the LocoScript software. One interesting thing is, that they didn't change their company logo for more than 20 years.

Web links