Every year, thousands of nerds and gadget fans descent on the real-life accompaniment to a popular TV show: The Gadget Show Live. This year the UCHG sent a delegation in the form of Fen and Ross, and this is what they saw.
There were countless stands, from all sorts of tech companies — ranging from the technology of tomorrow (like controlling stuff with your mind), to the more useful household gadgetry — such as a flushing toilet for your cat.
Of course, there are some things that catch your eye more than others: it was great to see some 3D printing going on, with real-life objects being created straight off a USB flash drive; a mini version of robot wars; and some super smart flying drones, controllable from your mobile, full of gyroscopes and accelerometers to keep them steady as a rock.
Custom built arcade machines made an appearance, though priced at £2-5k they were deemed a ripoff — and no where near as authentic at Fen’s own restored original.
There was a company that delivers retro gaming to parties, conferences, corporate events – though peering behind their flashy LED screens revealed just a pile of wires and consoles!
And of course there was the live show, though most of what we can recall is a few chicks
dancing about in skimpy outfits. Ross seemed to be too distracted to take a picture.
The PC hardware area was quite a draw for us — as long time customers of the site
overclockers.co.uk it was great to see them have a presence there. They showed off some of their rigs to us: custom made water-cooled beasts, running at nearly 5ghz with 4 meaty graphics cards. Rivalling this was Scan’s effort, a ridiculous machine called Swordfish: with three screens and some terrifying specs! It wasn’t functioning when we arrived, but we couldn’t stand by and not mess around with stuff: we had it working in no time.
We couldn’t leave without seeking out the retro computing area: as well as tech from throughout the years like an ancient morse code machine, PDAs the size of bricks, and the original computer that inspired Bill Gates (Altair 8800, pictured above) there was a host of gaming history.
We tried out a TurbograFX, Amiga CD32 (which was deemed to be shit, and took forever to load the game), Binatone pong machine, Commodore 16, Atari 600 XL and some early hand-helds including Astrowars and Munchman (which unlike the original Pacman only allowed you to eat the dots in one direction).
In summary it was damn awesome, so look at some retro consoles.
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