The Sinclair ZX80 was a home computer brought to market in 1980 by Sinclair Research. It was notable for being the first computer available in the United Kingdom for under a hundred pounds (a pricetag of £99.95, to be exact). It was available in kit form; purchasers had to assemble and solder it together. A ready-built version was also available at a slightly higher cost for those without the skill or inclination to build their own.
The machine was based around the NEC 780C-1 CPU (a Zilog Z80 clone) @ 3.25 MHz, and equipped with 1 KB of static RAM (expandable to 16K), and 4 KB ROM containing the Sinclair BASIC programming language, editor, and "OS". BASIC commands were not entered by spelling them out; instead, the commands were selected rather like they would be on a scientific calculator — each "key" had several different functions activated by use of several modifier (shift) keys.
The video display generator of the ZX80 used very minimalistic hardware plus a combination of software to generate a video signal. As a result of this approach the ZX80 could only generate a picture when it was idle, i.e. waiting for a key to be pressed. When running a BASIC program the display would black out. This prevented moving graphics etc. The later ZX81 improved on this somewhat because it could run 'slow' while creating a video signal, or 'fast' without generating a video signal (used for lengthy calculations).
The machine was mounted in a tiny white plastic case, with a one-piece blue membrane keyboard on the front; it owed its distinctive appearance to industrial designer Rick Dickinson. The entire system was about the size of two paperback books placed beside each other. It kick-started the 80s home computer craze in the UK and was the precursor to the ZX81 and the very successful ZX Spectrum.
The very first Sinclair Computer was the Sinclair MK14 - photos of a very rare example with many extras such as a tape interface can be found on the web site - http://www.retro-trader.com
Video output, as in the ZX80, was to a television set, and saving and loading programs was via an ordinary home audio tape recorder to magnetic audio tapes.
As with the ZX80, the processor was a NEC Zilog Z80 -compatible, only this time of the slightly higher clock rate of 3.5 MHz.
The ZX81 could run in FAST mode like the ZX80, blanking while programs ran, or in SLOW mode (approximately 1/4 as fast) in which the video was maintained since programs ran only while the TV's electron gun moved from the bottom to the screen back to the top.