Index to a page full of extra pictures
Index to all files from all the disks
First disk file list
Program notes Editorial & letters
Sam Supplement
2004 Online Remix 2 by Simon N Goodwin
This web site is a cut-down version of a CD produced for the 2003 ORSAM show
in Norwich UK. To find out how to get your own copy of that rare SAM-specific
CD, read to the end of this page. To learn why you'd want one, read on now.
The Supplement was originally started to bring together Sam owners, to give
them a "Contact" with other Sam owners for the swapping of information and
the exchange of ideas.
Over seven years, between September 1990 and September 1997 60 disks were
produced (including the double disk issue 12) plus sundry extras like the
Christmas Special, SAM Forth, and games compiled by Supplement publishers
Daton.
Sam Supplement was born when Brian Mumford and Dave Tonks came up with the
idea together of an offshoot of their disk magazine for users of the Opus
Discovery Spectrum disc drive, aimed at users of the new Spectrum-compatible
Sam Coupe computer.
Sam Supplement was a non-profit project run by volunteers, with issues priced
at just 50p if you supplied your own disk.
As Editor Dave Tonks reported in the 50th issue of the magazine:
Over the first five years we published 33.5 megs on more than 50 disks, with
the average disc holding 695k. For those readers not familiar with "megs",
one meg is 1024k, and as each K is made up of 1024 bytes, 33.5 meg is
35,127,296 bytes, which is quite a figure - especially on a system like Sam,
where a useful program might only occupy a few hundred bytes of disk space.
Of course, Dave did not take the credit for all of this:
it has been a joint effort of many, many people, some of whom are no
longer with us and some who have moved on to other things (I was going
to say better things, but "other" sums it up OK). I could not possibly
mention them all by name, but a few that spring to mind are Alan Miles
and Bruce Gordon for giving us the Sam, Brian Mumford, Steve Monk,
Frank Harrop Pete Bell, John Saunders, John Hutchins, Stan the Man,
Dave Ison, Andy Wright, Haine, Ian Spencer, Geoff Bridges, Vic Taylor,
Colin Rout, Derek Morgan, Ettrick Thompson, Simon N Goodwin, the late
Les Philips and of course Jean, Dave's better half, who put up with
endless phonecalls and had her own counter at the local Post Office.
Dave summed up:
"To anyone who I have missed, I apologise, and to all the people
over the years who have contributed, helped with or just simply
read the mag, a HUGE thank you. Without you I would have sat
here for 5 years with nothing to do."
In that issue Brian Mumford, Sam Supplement Distributor, added,
"I was talking to Dave the other evening about this issue - it is
our 50th - that's our Golden anniversary issue, that means that
five years ago we had that fateful conversation that saw the birth
of the Sam Supplement,when the Sam was but 1 month off the
production lines. The only magazine to mention it was Format.
I asked for permission to reprint their article in our founder
club magazine Spectrum Discovery Club. This was the first time
some of our members had heard of the Sam. Dave and I were
discussing the coverage we should give the Sam in the
Magazine,and we decided that it would be unfair to give a lot of
space in the SDC mag on a machine that most of the members did
not own yet. So the Supplement was born. Dave agreed that he
would edit the new magazine (I wonder if he would have if he
knew then what he knows now?)....
"We have seen lots of changes in the Sam world, some wonderful
hard and software developments, and lots of changes in ownership
of our blue footed friend, first there was MGT then SAMCO and
now West Coast Computers, but Sam has weathered the storms and
survived against the odds. When I look back at the first issues
and see my pathetic attempts at programming and then I look at
the latest issues and see how the magazine has grown up, I am
very proud to be associated with it. It has taken a lot of hard
work on Dave's part to keep the mag going, and at times he has
written 80% of the content."
The following year saw contributions to the magazine tail off, and in 1997
Dave reluctantly decided to call it a day, with the publication of issue 59
of the magazine. This is what he wrote in the editorial:
"I could, I suppose, struggle on issuing a couple of mags a year
but this misses the point of the Supplement, which was to keep
you in touch with the Sam world and its developments. This I
feel cannot be done with anything less than a bi-monthly mag. I
could go on for ever with my reasoning, but I have made my
decision, and I shall stick to it...
"I finally must give a great BIG thank you to all the people who
over the years have helped the Sam Supplement in millions of
ways.
"There are too many to name, but you know who you are. I have
had nearly 9 years of truly magnificent support, and have
enjoyed being the editor of what I consider to be one of the
best Sam disk mags."
In fact the Sam Scene continues to be active, in emulation and in the
development of new hardware and software - who would have guessed that Sam
would eventually come to support internal gigabyte hard disks, Flash memory
and even CDROMs, and the dozens of Sam-related sites on the Internet.
While the Internet has supplanted the role of disk magazines, the Sam
community continues to be represented in print by Sam Revival magazine and
the Profi club of Cologne, Germany.
My own involvement with Sam started months before the first reports of the
prototype computer were published in the micro press - as Technical Editor of
Crash magazine, in 1988 I visited Alan and Bruce in Cambridge when the first
Sam was a mass of wires packed onto a prototype board, running a ZX Spectrum
ROM and tapes from a cassette recorder adapted to run extra-fast to match the
6 MHz Z80B processor.
Over the folowing year Bruce added new graphics modes, the colour palette and
support for extra memory and peripherals. My friend Dr. Andy Wright joined
the team to write a new ROM for SAM, based on his Spectrum BetaBASIC then
greatly extended to take advantage of Sam's extra features. Alan Miles
obtained funding to put the machine into production in the UK, and - against
all the odds, so many years after the heyday of home computing - Sam was
born, reviving the best of eight bit computing and the do-it-together
micro community.
Sam Supplement exemplifies the spirit of Sam, in its focus on the
community of enthusiasts. As some people may kick themselves for missing the
swinging summers in the 1960s, or the emancipation of punk rock a decade
later, later computer enthusiasts will feel nostalgic for the heyday of eight
bit computers, when you could find out all the inner workings of a new
computer by asking and experimenting, and develop an original and useful
application in a few hours, without signing up for any developer support
program or non-disclosure agreements.
Now you can judge Sam Supplement and its legacy for yourself with this web
site, which contains HTML conversions of the program notes, letters and
editorials from all the issues of SAM Supplement as originally published,
hyperlinked file lists and title graphics from each issue.
A giftware CD is available containing all this material, plus the Supplement
and Daton disk images as well as emulators and utilities to get the programs
running on an original Sam or a modern computer (the sort you have to wait for).
To get a copy of this sent to you, please email
simon [at] mooli [dot] org [dot] uk
Simon N. Goodwin, Warwick, UK, November 2004.
Thanks to Dave Tonks for permission to put this compilation together, and Andy
Wright, Wolfgang Haller, Colin Piggot and Jarek Adamski (Yarek) for encouragement.
Link to the top of this document
First disk program notes
First disk editorial & letters
First disk files
Index to a page full of extra pictures
Index to all files from all the disks