Richard Altwasser

Richard Francis Altwasser
Born 1957(?)[1]
Nationality  England
Citizenship  United Kingdom
Education degree in Engineering (Trinity College, Cambridge)
Work
Employer(s) Sinclair Research (1980-1982)
Significant design ZX Spectrum's graphics mode

Richard Francis Altwasser is a British engineer and inventor, responsible for the hardware design of the ZX Spectrum.[2]

Biography

Altwasser graduated at Trinity College, Cambridge, with a degree in engineering in June 1978. He was hired by Sinclair Research in September 1980. His first assigned job was to write some programs to demonstrate the capabilities of the new 8 kB ROM and 16 kB RAM expansion for the ZX80. After that, he worked on the printed circuit board of the ZX81.[2]

After the launch of the ZX81, Altwasser was promoted to the computers development team and worked on the development of the ZX Spectrum, from the early technical discussions at the end of July 1981. His main contribution was the design of the graphics mode using less than 7 kilobytes of memory. He also participated in the preliminary stages of the development of the ZX Microdrive.[2]

Altwasser left Sinclair at the beginning of May 1982 to establish his own company, along with Steve Vickers, author of the Spectrum's ROM firmware and manual. Provisionally called Rainbow Computing Co.,[2][1] the company later became Jupiter Cantab Limited.[3]

Jupiter Cantab launched only one major product, a home computer called Jupiter Ace. The Ace was a failure both in the UK and in the U.S. markets. The company went bankrupt in November 1983.[4]

References

External links