WH Smith: What Would I Do With a Computer? This advert is a small A5 4-page booklet produced by UK newsagent chain WH Smith and demonstrates nicely how such regular High Street shops were very much part of the early home computer revolution. Sinclair - once it progressed beyond its initial mail-order-only policy - and Commodore were both companies which eschewed the traditional sales channel of dedicated dealerships in favour of user-friendly locations like department stores, toy shops and mainstream electrical dealers such as Lasky's, Curry's and Rumbelows. It also shows WH Smith in a bit of vertical integration: the advert says "We made it our business to find not only the best-value-for-money computer on the market [the ZX81], but also the best books to enable you to progress from a beginner to an advanced user". Pre-recorded software was also available for £3.95 - about [[4|1983]] in [[now]] money. [extra: JohnRoland_WHS_popcw_1982-07-15.jpg|John Roland of WH SMith, © POCW, 15th July 1982|420]In 1980, Smiths had conducted a survey of computer magazine sales, and following that started putting computer magazines and books together in its shops, sometimes with a PET demo going on as well. By September 1982, Smiths was selling the ZX81 through 120 of its shops, before widening that to include any shop in a population centre of more than 60,000 people. \"it's not like a garden chair. You cannot just look at it and understand completely" The company was still only selling the ZX81, as marketing development manager John Roland explained "When you are starting out in a new product field it is important to start with something nice and simple. The ZX81 has some super features for beginners". By summer, more than 400 of its staff had been sent on a full-time residential microcomputer training course, or as Roland suggested "it's not like a garden chair. You cannot just look at it and understand completely". Meanwhile, whilst "the ZX81's return per square foot of store area means that it more than earns its keep on the shelves", Smiths was also progressing with a plan to follow up with the VIC-20[source: "WH Smith advances in to computer world", Your Computer, November 1981, p. 13]. By August 1983, Smiths had the largest share of the retail market for micros at 18%. Another high-street name, Boots the Chemist, which had started at about the same time, was selling the less-popular TI-99/4 micro as well as the VIC-20, and so was bringing up the rear with only 2%. Market-research outfit Mintel predicted that 1.25 million micros would be sold in the UK during 1983, a market worth about £200 million (around [[200|1983]] million in [[now]] terms)[source: "Micro boom - it's a serious business", Personal Computer News, Vol 1. No. 24, August 24 1983, p. 8]. A chunk of WH Smith's business (and no doubt why they were advertising on behalf of Sinclair) may have been thanks to the exclusive deal it had to sell the ZX81, at least until late 1982 after the Spectrum had been launched and Sinclair started selling the ZX81 through other retailers including John Menzies, Wigfalls and Rank Xerox[source: "Chutzpah from Oric", Personal Computer World, November 1982, p.87]. Thanks to this exclusive deal, Smiths was, at one point, selling training-software cassettes for the ZX81 as fast as they could be made. The company placed an order for 100,000 cassettes with a slightly unexpected source, systems behemoth ICL Computers, whose training division had written the software and who was managing to produce tapes that were more reliable and which could be read better by the ZX81 than tapes the machine itself was capable of saving[source: "Sinclair-ICL tie-up", Personal Computer World, February 1982, p. 69]. In the late summer of 1983, WH Smith even dabbled in hardware, when it launched its CPD-8300 computer-compatible cassette recorder, compatible with any micro that used regular microphone and earphone sockets - meaning most micros except those from Commodore[source: "WH Smith takes plunge in to hardware", PCN, September 22 1983, p. 7]. The player came with save and load level adjustment, as some machines like the BBC Micro were known for overwhelming the recording circuits of some tape players, although a DIY hack to wire in a 5K limiting resistor was available to anyone with a soldering iron[source: "Beeb Bug", Personal Computer World, September 1982, page 91]. The player was available from 27th September 1983. [extra: waterloo.jpg|WH Smith at Waterloo Station, September 1987|400]WH Smith was still very much in the micro retail game at the end of 1984, where it was reported to be launching a credit-plan scheme, available for purchases between £400 to £2,000 ([[400|1984]] - [[2000|1984]] in [[now]]) including a 10% deposit, at an APR of around 27% - about the same as credit cards of the day. The price that WH Smith was aiming at was telling, as the home market was reaching saturation and micros were on the cusp of moving "up-market" towards home and small business machines. John Roland, WH Smith's merchandise controller for personal computers said "this will help our more serious customers with their purchases, particularly with Christmas approaching"[source: "Computer credit", Home Computing Weekly, December 18th 1984, p. 5]. However, it was no longer interested in the humble ZX81 it had started out with, sales of which had been wound down in the late summer of 1983. HMV took up the slack when it announced that it was starting to sell computer software from the end of September of the same year, initially at its Oxford Street and Glasgow shops. A range of 70 to 80 titles was expected to be available for machines including the ZX81, ZX Spectrum, VIC-20, Dragon, Oric, BBC and Atari's 400 and 800 models. The company would even order a title in if it was out of stock[source: "HMV set for software sales", PCN, September 29th 1983, p. 4]. At about the same time, WH Smith opened up a branch of its Computer Shop at Waterloo Station, an opening that was accompanied by a lawsuit from IBM. This was because it was selling the Advance 86, an IBM clone built by Ferranti and which IBM considered had a BIOS that was uncannily similar to IBM's own. IBM had written to both WH Smith and Ferranti only a week before the shop opened, effectively saying "stop it". IBM's claim stated that it had "rigorously examined the routines and found that they were 90% identical with our own. Even the known errors in the BIOS have been reproduced identically"[source: "Grapes of wrath", PCW, January 1985, p. 110]. Ferranti, meanwhile, was suggesting that a new version of the software would be available soon, although its timescale of a replacement within three weeks seemed a bit optimistic. The company also announced that it was taking over the distribution of the Advance, a move no doubt engineered to soothe dealers worried about the impact of legal action by IBM.