View allAll Photos Tagged sinclair
Match world Women's Cup
14 July 2012 - Châtel-Saint-Denis, SUI
Christine Sinclair and Karina LeBlanc
In 1984 Sinclair launched the ZX Spectrum+. A fully suitable name, because the 'Plus' was nothing more then a face lifted normal ZX Spectrum, the big bang for Sinclair that was launched two years before.
The Spectrum+ tried to solve the biggest minus of all Sinclair computers so far: the awkward keyboard.
Period: 1984 - ...
CPU: Zilog Z80A
CPU clock: 3,5 MHz
Memory: ROM 16 KB + RAM 48 KB
Text mode: 32 x 24
Graphic mode: 256x192
Colours: 8 x 2 bright level
Sound: 1-channel beeper
I/O: TV, tape, extension port
2016 CONCACAF Women's Olympic Qualifying
21 February 2016 - Houston, TX, USA
Canada Soccer by Mexsport
Julie Johnston v Christine Sinclair
I don't think this is an original Sinclair Oil Company station but a recreation of one in Durand, Michigan. It has a number of original artifacts.
Sinclair also made Brontosaurus with the skull of the Camarasaurus. Their figure goes well with the Marx one and it is easy to confuse the two. I have seen this one listed as a Marx one on eBay.
In 1984 Sinclair launched the ZX Spectrum+. A fully suitable name, because the 'Plus' was nothing more then a face lifted normal ZX Spectrum, the big bang for Sinclair that was launched two years before.
The Spectrum+ tried to solve the biggest minus of all Sinclair computers so far: the awkward keyboard.
Period: 1984 - ...
CPU: Zilog Z80A
CPU clock: 3,5 MHz
Memory: ROM 16 KB + RAM 48 KB
Text mode: 32 x 24
Graphic mode: 256x192
Colours: 8 x 2 bright level
Sound: 1-channel beeper
I/O: TV, tape, extension port
An example of the very first electronic calculator I ever owned. I built mine myself from a kit in about 1974. By modern standards it was rubbish - only accurate to about 5 significant figures on log and trig functions - but that was better than 3SF on a slide rule, and it could add and subtract! It made physics homework much easier :-)
It had an interesting feature that has stayed with me over the years - Reverse Polish Logic, no "=" button. After this I had a sequence of Hewlett-Packard calculators, all of which used the same system (though a much better implementation of it). The line culminated in an HP-42S in 1989, which I still have; if that machine can't easily do the calculation at hand, I need a PC...
EBP2aii Drone Part showing Sterling Silver Slide and Ferrule in Engraved Runic Design and Imitation Ivory Projecting Mount
2016 CONCACAF Women's Olympic Qualifying
19 February 2016 - Houston, TX, USA
Canada Soccer by Mexsport
Christine Sinclair goal celebration
2016 CONCACAF Women's Olympic Qualifying
19 February 2016 - Houston, TX, USA
Canada Soccer by Mexsport
Christine Sinclair goal celebration
I stopped briefly at the side of the road to check my map and when I was finished I noticed this eye catching little scene. A little texture by Kim Klassen called Granny's Cupboard gave it the final touch.
Christine Sinclair (CAN)
Women Bronze Medal Game - France vs Canada
Ricoh Arena, Coventry, England
August 9th 2012 - Olympic Games 2012
More pictures on Pitchside Report
EBP4aii Drone Part showing Nickel Ferrule in Engraved Runic Design and Standard Imitation Ivory Projecting Mount
In 1984 Sinclair launched the ZX Spectrum+. A fully suitable name, because the 'Plus' was nothing more then a face lifted normal ZX Spectrum, the big bang for Sinclair that was launched two years before.
The Spectrum+ tried to solve the biggest minus of all Sinclair computers so far: the awkward keyboard.
Period: 1984 - ...
CPU: Zilog Z80A
CPU clock: 3,5 MHz
Memory: ROM 16 KB + RAM 48 KB
Text mode: 32 x 24
Graphic mode: 256x192
Colours: 8 x 2 bright level
Sound: 1-channel beeper
I/O: TV, tape, extension port
FIFA Women's World Cup Canada 2015 advertising campaign
17 April 2015 - Montréal, QC, Canada
Encourageons Le Canada le 15 juin
FIFA.com/Canada2015
he Sinclair C5 is a small one-person battery electric vehicle, technically an "electrically assisted pedal cycle".[1] (Although widely described as an "electric car", Sinclair characterised it as a "vehicle, not a car".[2]) It was the culmination of Sir Clive Sinclair's long-running interest in electric vehicles. Sinclair had become one of the UK's best-known millionaires and earned a knighthood on the back of the highly successful Sinclair Research range of home computers in the early 1980s. He now hoped to repeat his success in the electric vehicle market, which he saw as ripe for a new approach. The C5 emerged from an earlier project to produce a Renault Twizy-style electric car called the C1. After a change in the law prompted by lobbying from bicycle manufacturers, Sinclair developed the C5 as an electrically powered tricycle with a polypropylene body and a chassis designed by Lotus Cars. It was intended to be the first in a series of increasingly ambitious electric vehicles, but in the event the planned development of the followup C10 and C15 electric cars never got further than the drawing board.
Women's International Friendly match
30 June 2012 - Sandy, UT, USA
Christine Sinclair and Erin McLeod
c. 1930s based on metered pumps
Citation: Nelson Dionne Salem History Collection, Salem State University Archives and Special Collections, Salem, Massachusetts
In 1984 Sinclair launched the ZX Spectrum+. A fully suitable name, because the 'Plus' was nothing more then a face lifted normal ZX Spectrum, the big bang for Sinclair that was launched two years before.
The Spectrum+ tried to solve the biggest minus of all Sinclair computers so far: the awkward keyboard.
Period: 1984 - ...
CPU: Zilog Z80A
CPU clock: 3,5 MHz
Memory: ROM 16 KB + RAM 48 KB
Text mode: 32 x 24
Graphic mode: 256x192
Colours: 8 x 2 bright level
Sound: 1-channel beeper
I/O: TV, tape, extension port
Women's National Team Roster Announcement
27 April 2015 - Vancouver, BC, Canada
Canada Soccer by Bob Frid
Christine Sinclair and player escort
Women's National Team Roster Announcement
27 April 2015 - Vancouver, BC, Canada
Canada Soccer by Bob Frid
Christine Sinclair
EBP06 Drone Slide close-up showing typical Imitation Ivory Ferrule and alternative small bulb style mount
In 1984 Sinclair launched the ZX Spectrum+. A fully suitable name, because the 'Plus' was nothing more then a face lifted normal ZX Spectrum, the big bang for Sinclair that was launched two years before.
The Spectrum+ tried to solve the biggest minus of all Sinclair computers so far: the awkward keyboard.
Period: 1984 - ...
CPU: Zilog Z80A
CPU clock: 3,5 MHz
Memory: ROM 16 KB + RAM 48 KB
Text mode: 32 x 24
Graphic mode: 256x192
Colours: 8 x 2 bright level
Sound: 1-channel beeper
I/O: TV, tape, extension port