About Random Kak

Welcome to Random Kak.

This site is the resting place for my old and new games, written between 1985 and the current day. Initially the content will be a bit sparse until I add the complete set of games. However, all of my new ZX Spectrum Games will be online from the start.


I have been involved with computers since 1981, when a tiny, sleek home micro (as they were called back then) called a Sinclair ZX81 arrived at my door, and I have been hooked ever since. Initially computers were a fascination and more than just something to play games on, although I did my fare share.


I was interested in how they worked, how to write my own programs and how to plug things into them that didn’t end in tiny wisps of white smoke. After the ZX81 came the momentous Sinclair ZX Spectrum. A beautiful, colour, rubber keyed dream that even had sound. This machine is solely responsible for the UK IT industry as it is today, and rightly holds a place in many people’s hearts.

I was one of the rare breed of people who bought a modem for the Spectrum and ran a viewdata bulletin board called ‘The Hole’ running at 1200/75 half baud.

At this point I was still a user and looking to upgrade by the late eighties to the new wonder machine, the Commodore Amiga A500. I had a brief fling with the Commodore 64, but that was short lived and the Amiga soon took over as my main computer.

It was at this point I left my mundane day job and took up an offer from a local one-man computer outfit to help him with the business. The business grew and soon expanded into large premises with more staff, eventually becoming a large retailer turning over millions a year. Because of the small team my role moved on from sales and took in repair work, upgrade work and hardware related testing. I can still recall the first time I upgraded an Amiga A500 to use 1mb of chip RAM by a simple track cut and solder job.

My Amiga circa 1988
I also kept up my communications, buying another modem and running my own Amiga BBS called Image Viewdata. Again running at 1200/75 using comms software from Y2 computing. I used to get woken up in the middle of the night with the sound of my disk drives whirring away as some late night user browsed my system.

It was around this time I began to write software. Nothing special; a few public domain games for the Amiga were about as good as it got, although I was threatened by Games Workshop once for using one of their images!

My Amiga was upgraded to a B2000 with 20mb Seagate hard drive, yes that’s megabyte and not gigabyte! Then came the A4000, a cracking machine that I wish I had never sold.

Soon the PC’s, previously only a business computer, began to become cheaper and real contender for home use - the rest is history.

7 comments:

Edward Catflap said...

Just want to say thanks for the videos on you tube. Really enjoy them. Good work!

Paul (Random Kak) said...

Cheers. Glad you like them.

boriel said...

Hey!
I've just discovered you used ZX BASIC compiler to make one of your games??? :) Is that true???
Glad to hear that!

Paul (Random Kak) said...

Hi Boriel, Yes I used your brilliant compiler for two of my games, Broken Friend and Bounty. Many thanks for creating such a great tool.

Ed said...

Any clues as to the origin of this site name? Being South African I'm intrigued lol

Paul (Random Kak) said...

Ed: I wish I had thought of a better name, but now it's too embedded in the videos etc. Kak in the UK is slang for shit, and the site was originally a collection of different unrelated.. kak...!

Hendrikk said...

Thank you for the video's and the magazine's, it is great to see and read it, you are doing a very good job on this.

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