[{"TitleName":"Cattell IQ Test","Publisher":"Sinclair Research Ltd","Author":"Victor Serebriakoff","YearOfRelease":"1983","ZxDbId":"0008006","Reviews":[{"Issue":{"Name":"Sinclair User Issue 21, Dec 1983","Price":"£0.75","ReleaseDate":"1983-11-17","Editor":"Nigel Clark","TotalPages":204,"HasCoverTape":false,"FlannelPanel":"Managing Editor: Nigel Clark\r\nDeputy Editor: Nicole Segre\r\nConsultant Editor: Mike Johnston\r\nManaging Production Editor: Harold Mayes MBE\r\nSoftware Editor: John Gilbert\r\nProgram Reviewer: Rebecca Ferguson\r\nIllustrator/Designer: Brian King\r\nGroup Advertisement Manager: John Ross\r\nSales Executive: Annette Burrows\r\nProduction Assistant: Dezi Epaminondou\r\nEditorial Assistant: Colette McDermott\r\nManaging Director: Terry Cartwright\r\nChairman: Richard Hease\r\n\r\nSinclair User is published monthly by ECC Publications Ltd.\r\n\r\nTelephone\r\nAll departments\r\n[redacted]\r\n\r\nIf you would like to contribute to any of the Sinclair User group of publications please send programs, articles or ideas for hardware projects to:\r\nSinclair User and Programs\r\nECC Publications\r\n[redacted]\r\n\r\nPrograms should be on cassette and articles should be typed. We cannot undertake to return them unless a stamped-addressed envelope is included.\r\n\r\nWe will pay £10 for each program published and £50 per 1,000 words for each article used.\r\n\r\n©Copyright 1983\r\nSinclair User\r\nISSN NO. 0262-5458\r\n\r\nPrinted and typeset by Cradley Print PLC, [redacted]\r\n\r\nDistributed by Spotlight Magazine Distribution Ltd, [redacted]\r\n\r\nCover Photograph: Peter Dawney"},"MainText":"NEW COMPANIES ON THE SINCLAIR BANDWAGON\r\n\r\nJohn Gilbert looks at the latest additions to Sinclair Research's growing software library.\r\n\r\nSinclair Research seems to have its eye on the rest of the software market, something which it was loathe to do two months ago. It has opened its software range to such an extent that new and smaller companies, other than Artic Computing and Melbourne House, have had a chance to enter their programs into a range which already includes such programs as The Hobbit and the Artic range of adventures.\r\n\r\nThe new companies on the Sinclair Research bandwagon are Crystal Computing and Ultimate Play The Game. Crystal Computing has sold its Zeus Assembler and Monitor Disassembler to Sinclair. That means it at last has two machine code utilities, for the 48K Spectrum, in its range.\r\n\r\nThe Crystal Zeus Assembler is one of the best of its kind and provides excellent facilities for beginners and experts alike. Writing assembly language using it is almost as easy as writing Basic code. Each line of source assembly code as indexed with a number, just as Basic instructions are indexed with line numbers.\r\n\r\nAll the features which are found usually on assemblers have been included. Labels and expressions can be included within source code and strings of symbols can be entered into memory tables using the utilities in Zeus.\r\n\r\nOne of the advantages of Zeus is that you do not have to include an ORG instruction with the program to indicate to the computer where to put the object code when it has been assembled. If you omit the ORG instruction the computer will allocate the code to a space in memory.\r\n\r\nThe problem with Zeus is that you have to exit from the assembler to save the code which has been generated. If you are a beginner that can be a lengthy and nerve-racking process and you have no guarantee that you can load the code back into the computer.\r\n\r\nApart from the lengthy preparations for loading and saving, the assembler is still one of the best on the market. It is a pity that Sinclair Research has put it into a colourful box to justify a price rise of approximately £4. The box may look pleasant and it may improve the quality of the product on the shelf, from a commercial point of view, but the box will not help you to program.\r\n\r\nThe same is true of many of the other programs in the range. The boxes do not add anything to the product once you have it at home and paying up to £4 extra for packaging is unlikely to go down well with most customers.\r\n\r\nThe Monitor and Disassembler for the 16K/48K Spectrum is from Crystal and the price of the product has also been increased substantially. It can be used with the Zeus Assembler and will provide a disassembly of source code from your machine code programs or from the Spectrum operating system in the ROM of the machine.\r\n\r\nThe Monitor will also enable the user to assign values to the CPU registers. That means that values can be set to test machine code programs and to see how they run under certain conditions. Machine code routines can be copied from one part of memory to another and the routines can be edited in hexidecimal using the Monitor. One other useful function is to convert a hexidecimal value to decimal and vice versa when you are using the editing routines. That saves a number of calculations on paper.\r\n\r\nThe Monitor and Disassembler is the perfect companion to the Assembler but at a combined price of nearly £25 it is expensive.\r\n\r\nThe next two additions to the Sinclair software library for the Spectrum can both be regarded as mind games. Flippit, for the 16K or 48K Spectrum, has been put on a parallel with the Rubik Cube by Sinclair Research. It certainly is a maddening puzzle and almost impossible to master completely. The Flippit board is like a noughts and crosses grid - it has nine sectors, set out in a three-by-three grid. The computer labels those using the letters the alphabet, A to I, and numbers or dots fill each corner of each square.\r\n\r\nTo complete the game you must find the correct combination of numbers so that they add to the same sum horizontally, vertically and diagonally. That means the game is nothing more than the type of magic squares we all enjoyed solving when we were at school.\r\n\r\nThey can be played competitively and to emphasise the point the moves you have taken so far and the moves which you have to beat before getting the record are part of the board display.\r\n\r\nThere are three playing options. The first is New Run which will make the computer re-shuffle the numbers on the board into random patterns. The next option is similar to the first and will re-run the last random setting. That means that the order in which the numbers were placed on the last shuffle is restored.\r\n\r\nFlippit seems so easy when you first start to play but when you have only two numbers out of place it can become irritating and it is easy to give up, rather than plodding along with the problem. If you are left with the numbers in the wrong places you may have to do major re-shuffle of the board.\r\n\r\nThe manual is concise and to the point but includes no information about strategy or play. It tells the player only how to set up the Spectrum and what are the various play options.\r\n\r\nOne other criticism is that it has no SAVE option for beginners who are puzzlers or who want to break for lunch.\r\n\r\nThe other mind game in the selection is more of a test of mind power. The Cattell IQ Test provides the user with a standard reference to any intelligence quotient. It is the type of test which potential members of Mensa, the organisation whose members have high IQs, must take.\r\n\r\nOn loading, the computer takes some time to set up the tests. There are six types of logic test which must be taken before the computer can give you an accurate IQ score. Those types include synonym finding, classification, opposites, analogies and inferences.\r\n\r\nThe results are co-ordinated from the various individual tests to give a percentile overall rating. The Spectrum will tell you eventually whether it is worthwhile applying for membership of Mensa.\r\n\r\nAfter being extremely serious about the validity of the tests, throughout the manual it says in the section about the meaning of the results that the tests should not be taken too seriously and that the tests will not prove that you are a genius. Even if you cannot go around wearing a badge saying 'genius', once you have taken the Cattell test you should have some fun with the package.\r\n\r\nUnfortunately the copy we were sent of the rests was tediously slow in producing marks for the various sections and in setting-up the data. Although it looked like a production copy of the package, Sinclair Research says that it is producing a better version of the program.\r\n\r\nThe final cassette-based program from the library, for the 48K Spectrum, is Chequered Flag and it is the only one not in a box. The program is from Psion and it is up to that company's usual standards.\r\n\r\nThe game sets you as a racing driver over one of the number of world-famous racing tracks, such as Silverstone. You can choose which car you want to use from a visual menu describing a number of well-known racing cars. You can also choose the course on which you want to travel.\r\n\r\nThe race will take place on the screen, using a three-dimensional representation of the track. Apart from the danger of crashing over the sides of the track, there is also oil on the road surface. At all costs you must avoid the oil or it could cause your car to skid. Once you have been round the track the required number of times, the chequered flag will be raised on the screen and your lap time will be given by the computer.\r\n\r\nThe graphic and real-time simulation effects produced by the software are reminiscent of the Flight Simulation program, also available from Psion through Sinclair Research. There are several tracks and cars to try, so the game should provide hours of entertainment. The quality of the game and the detail included make it one of the great games for the Spectrum.\r\n\r\nThe quality control and selection of software for the Sinclair software library has certainly increased with the release of this new batch of tapes. The boxes in which most of the products are now packaged are certainly an improvement on the cassette covers which were being used. One disadvantage for retailers will be that display shelves will be occupied more quickly by fewer products. That should be offset, though, by the prices which Sinclair is charging for its new software.\r\n\r\nThat has already caused murmurs of discontent from customers about to buy software from a company, only to find that Sinclair has bought it and the price has been increased. If Sinclair continues to raise its prices in this way the company could sell less in the way of software and customers may go elsewhere in a large market. That would be a bad move.\r\n\r\nThe 'L' Game is produced by Quicksilva. It consists of some coloured tiles on a board which are originally in the shape of an 'L' but which the computer manages to mix extremely well. The player then has to slide the tiles back into the correct order to form the 'L' in the least number of moves. It is like doing a jigsaw puzzle with no edges.\r\n\r\nAlso included on the cassette with the 'L' Game are Mastermind and Pontoon. If you like puzzles, this cassette is good value for money.\r\n\r\nFlippit is from Sinclair Research and is a test of logic and arithmetic. The player has to get all the numbers or dots in a square in such a position that the values will be the same when added horizontally, vertically and diagonally. It is a puzzle which you will either love or hate.\r\n\r\nThe game is like a giant magic square and if you are adept at spotting combinations and have a fast calculation rate you should be able to do the puzzle fairly quickly. So far I have managed to fit the puzzle together with only two pieces remaining out of sequence. The problem is that the instructions are not so good as the puzzle and you could have difficulty in getting started.\r\n\r\nFlippit is suited to those people who like IQ tests to learn their so-called intelligence quotient. I think that the only thing IQ tests prove is that a person can do an IQ test but if you want to learn what your rating is you might like to try The Cattell IQ Test.\r\n\r\nI would be interested to hear your views on this or any other IQ test and also the marks you gained. Do not cheat. The Spectrum is ideally suited to such an application but is the application valid.\r\n\r\nI hope that I have provided you with some ideas about the mind games on the market, especially those suitable as Christmas presents. You should not have too much difficulty deciding what to buy even though there is a wide area to cover.\r\n\r\nMelbourne House, [redacted] - The Hobbit\r\n\r\nCarnell Software, [redacted] - Volcanic Dungeon, Black Crystal, The Wrath of Magra\r\n\r\nSinclair Research, [redacted] - Artic Adventures A, B, C, D, Flippit\r\n\r\nQuicksilva, [redacted] - 'L' Game.","ReviewerComments":[],"OverallSummary":"","Page":"64,65","Denied":false,"Award":"Not Awarded","Reviewers":[{"Name":"John Gilbert","Score":"","ScoreSuffix":""}],"ScreenshotText":[],"BlurbText":[{"Text":"'Flippit has been put on a parallel with the Rubik Cube. It certainly is a maddening puzzle and almost impossible to master completely.'"},{"Text":"'The Spectrum will tell you if it is worth applying for membership of Mensa.'"},{"Text":"'If Sinclair continues to raise its prices in this way the company could sell less software and customers may go elsewhere in a large market.'"}],"TranscriptBy":"Chris Bourne","ReviewScores":null,"CompilationReviewScores":[]},{"Issue":{"Name":"Your Spectrum Issue 1, Jan 1984","Price":"£0.95","ReleaseDate":"1983-12-15","Editor":"Bruce Sawford","TotalPages":98,"HasCoverTape":false,"FlannelPanel":"Editor: Bruce Sawford\r\nContributing Editor: Roger Munford\r\nTechnical Editor: Ron Smith\r\nEditorial Consultant: Andrew Pennell\r\nSoftware Consultant: Gavin Monk\r\nProduction Editor: Derek Cohen\r\nContributors: Guy Kewney, Phil Manchester, Toni Baker, Steve Mann, Stephen Adams, John McNulty, Mark Anson, Maggie Burton, Alan Jowett, Dr John Nunn, Jonathan How\r\nArt Editor: Jimmy Egerton\r\nGroup Advertisement Manager: Jeff Raggett\r\nAdvertisement Executives: Norman Setra, Arthur Medley\r\nTypesetters: Bunch Typesetting\r\nProduction Manager: Sonia Hunt\r\nGroup Art Director: Perry Neville\r\nPublisher: Stephen England\r\nDistribution Manager: Colin James\r\nPublished by Sportscene Specialist Press Ltd, [redacted] Company registered in England. Telephone (all departments): [redacted]\r\nReproduction: Graphic Ideas, London\r\nPrinters: Chase Web Offset [redacted]\r\nDistribution: Seymour Press [redacted]\r\n\r\nAll material in Your Spectrum ©1983 Felden productions, and may not be reproduced in whole or in part without the written consent of the publishers. Your Spectrum is a bi-monthly publication and the second issue will be available during the first week of February 1984.\r\n\r\nThanks to Pilot Software City ([redacted]) for the loan of countless pieces\r\nof software, and without whom the miraculous would have been totally impossible."},"MainText":"IQ TO U2\r\n\r\nThe so-called measurement of intelligence has always been a bit suspect, so it was with a degree of scepticism that we prised open the Cattell IQ test - one of a fistful of new programs put out by Sinclair Research itself at the PCW show in October. The package comes complete with a cassette carrying the test and an eight-page booklet explaining what to do, all at a brain-numbing £12.95. \"This is the first time that a fully standardised and widely accepted IQ test has been available to the general public\", says the introductory blurb.\r\n\r\nIt continues with a number of disclaimers which seem to infer that unless you are of above average intelligence in the first place, the results will be questionable. (Maybe you have to take another test before you take this one to see if you are up to its standard of test taking?) But for those brainy enough, advancement is near. \"Your ZX Spectrum will tell you if you reach a level at which it would be worthwhile your applying to Mensa.\"\r\n\r\nAt this stage, scepticism became a teeny bit tinged with cynicism. For those few - people in the world who don't know, the president of Mensa happens to be one Sir Clive Sinclair. Could the product be a new means of recruiting for the society of eggheads? Perhaps too we can look forward to other such products which test, say, manual dexterity for potential brain surgeons. But to be fair the booklet does point out that you should not take the results too seriously and adds: \"This test will not prove conclusively that you are a genius - and those who do not do well at the test may well have other sterling qualities.\" Hmmm.\r\n\r\nYour correspondent was not able to test out the quality of his own brain, but for more mundane reasons. A few days after receiving the cassette from Sinclair Research, a letter arrived telling us that there was a bug (in the program, that is) and that a replacement would soon be winging its way over. We are waiting - patiently. Watch this space.","ReviewerComments":[],"OverallSummary":"","Page":"11","Denied":false,"Award":"Not Awarded","Reviewers":[],"ScreenshotText":[],"BlurbText":[],"TranscriptBy":"Chris Bourne","ReviewScores":null,"CompilationReviewScores":[]},{"Issue":{"Name":"Personal Computer News Issue 65, Jun 1984","Price":"","ReleaseDate":"1984-06-16","Editor":"Cyndy Miles","TotalPages":58,"HasCoverTape":false,"FlannelPanel":"Editorial\r\nEditor: Cyndy Miles\r\nManaging Editor: Peter Worlock\r\nSub-Editors: Harriet Arnold, Leah Batham\r\nNews Editor: David Guest\r\nNews Writer: Ralph Bancroft\r\nFeatures Editor: John Lettice\r\nSoftware Editor: Bryan Skinner\r\nPeripherals Editor: Ken Garroch\r\nListings Editor: Wendie Pearson\r\nPrograms Editor: Nickie Robinson\r\nArt Director: Jim Dansie\r\nArt Editor: David Robinson\r\nAssistant Art Editor: Floyd Sayers\r\nPublisher: Mark Eisen\r\nPublishing Assistant: Jenny Dunne\r\nGroup Publisher: John Cade\r\nPublishing Admin: Jackie Searle\r\n\r\nAdvertising\r\nGroup Advertising Manager: Duncan Brown\r\nAdvertisement Manager: Bettina Williams\r\nAssistant Advertisement Manager: Sarah Barron\r\nSales Executives: Christian McCarthy, John Bryan, Laura Cade, Paul Evans, Debbie Quinn, Yvonne Charatynowicz\r\nProduction: Nikki Payne\r\nAdvertisement Assistant: Karen Isaac\r\nSubscription Enquiries: Gill Stevens\r\nSubscription Address: [redacted]\r\nEditorial Address: [redacted]\r\nAdvertising Address: [redacted]\r\n\r\nPublished by VNU Business Publications, [redacted]\r\n© VNU 1983. No material maybe reproduced in whole or in part without written consent from the copyright holders.\r\nPhotoset by Quickset, [redacted]\r\nPrinted by Chase Web Offset, [redacted]\r\nDistributed by Seymour Press, [redacted]\r\nRegistered at the PO as a newspaper"},"MainText":"LET'S GET QUIZZICAL\r\n\r\nBob Chappell asks some questions of BBCs and Spectrums.\r\n\r\nNAME: Grandmaster Quizzes\r\nPRICE: £12.65\r\nSYSTEM: BBC B\r\nPUBLISHER: Acornsoft, Cambridge\r\nFORMAT: Cassette\r\n\r\nNAME: Cattell IQ Test\r\nPRICE: £12.95\r\nSYSTEM: Spectrum 48K\r\nPUBLISHER: Sinclair, Cambridge\r\nFORMAT: Cassette\r\n\r\nAlthough Samuel Johnson is reputed to have said that questioning was not the mode of conversation among gentlemen, there's no doubt today that questioning exercises a strange fascination over much of the population. The popularity of quiz books and magazines, together with such long-running radio and TV shows as Brain of Britain, University Challenge and Mastermind practically settles any argument on that subject.\r\n\r\nThe interest shown in question-and-answer entertainment is such that it was inevitable that they would find their way onto home computers. However, does a micro-based set of quizzes have any advantages over a book containing exactly the same quizzes, bearing in mind that the book is likely to be cheaper, quicker, and more convenient to use? Like many questions, there are pros and cons.\r\n\r\nDRAWBACKS\r\n\r\nOne disadvantage with a micro-based quiz is that you've got the bother of loading in the program, and then further loading of the database of questions and answers. Where a cassette has several quizzes, each of which must be loaded separately, there's the extra trouble of locating the correct start position on the tape rather than waiting around the program searches for the desired section.\r\n\r\nSome micro quizzes attempt to match your answers against the stored ones, and this can often lead to some silliness. For example, you could type in SAINT PAUL as the answer to a question but receive the response WRONG. THE ANSWER is ST. PAUL. The better programs give the answers and leave you to allocate the marks.\r\n\r\nADVANTAGE, HOME COMPUTER\r\n\r\nHowever, a computer-based quiz can set up and control a time limit for answering the questions. Even better, it might offer an automatic adjusting limit which sets the time limit for the next question at a lower or higher level, depending on how well you're doing. At the end of the quiz, it can provide the totals of both the marks and the time expended, if the program has an option for two players to participate it can keep track of whose turn it is, prompting as necessary.\r\n\r\nAlso, you can't accidentally cheat by flipping over to the answer page and having your eye caught by the answer to a question you haven't yet been asked.\r\n\r\nYOUR STARTER FOR TEN\r\n\r\nAcornsoft, In association with Ivan Berg Software, have published six programs in their Grandmaster Quiz series for the BBC B micro. The programs are based on Weidenfield Quiz books and each one is devoted to a specific subject, backed by a famous name in that field. The topics are Crime and Detection (Julian Symons), History (John Julius Norwich), Music (Steve Race), Science Fiction (Brian Aldiss), Royalty (Anthony Holden), and Theatre (Sheridan Morley).\r\n\r\nEach package consists of two cassettes, one holding the master program, the other the database of 30 quizzes. As each quiz contains ten questions, you will be given a massive test (at least 300 questions, some of which require multiple answers) on your chosen subject. All the programs work to the same format and offer solo play; dual play as two competing individuals or two teams; optional time limit; auto-adjustment of time limit; self-marking (maximum two points per question); a PASS feature; and totaling of scores and timings.\r\n\r\nThe questions are attractively displayed and are phrased in many different ways. They range over a wide number of topics within a subject, and may require more than one answer. Here's a few examples: Crime and Detection - Quiz 1 Elementary, My Dear Reader; Quiz 11 The Film of the Book; Quiz 13 For Chandler Addicts.\r\n\r\nHistory - Quiz 4 Not Upon Oath; Quiz 6 Gunpowder, Treason and Plot; Quiz 11 Dumb Friends.\r\n\r\nMusic - Quiz 4 The Singer, Not the Song; Quiz 8 Operatissimo; Quiz 12 Instrumentally Speaking.\r\n\r\nThe programs are pleasingly presented, the contents thoroughly stimulating. It's not an examination - the quizzes are meant for pleasure, to amuse rather than instruct. Excellent entertainment courtesy of Acornsoft and your BBC B.\r\n\r\nMENSA MATERIAL\r\n\r\nMuch more scientific but equally entertaining is Professor Cattell's IQ Test, published by Sinclair for the 48K Spectrum. It is a fully standardised IQ test, the object of which is to test the general ability of adults of above-average intelligence.\r\n\r\nThe whole thing takes about 1.5 hours to complete and consists of six tests. These cover synonyms, classification (find the odd one out), opposites, analogies (a is to b as c is to?), sentence completion, and inferences (problems, puzzles and reasoning tests). Each test has a time limit for completion, such as 12 minutes to answer 25 questions. If you finish early, you get a chance to review and amend any of your solutions.\r\n\r\nThe possible answers to each question are given as a list; you merely have to pick out the one you think is correct. You are never told what the answer should be. Instead, at the end of the sixth test, you are given a report on your performance, your IQ score and a percentile rating. If you have an IQ of 147 and a percentile rating of 97, this means that 97 per cent of the population would have scored lower than you. Achieve this level of rating and the program will suggest you apply for membership of MENSA.\r\n\r\nAn excellent program, though don't take the final results too seriously since you are not really being tested under standard conditions. Apart from the entertainment value. It will give the old grey matter a thorough shake-up.","ReviewerComments":[],"OverallSummary":"","Page":"38","Denied":false,"Award":"Not Awarded","Reviewers":[{"Name":"Bob Chappell","Score":"","ScoreSuffix":""}],"ScreenshotText":[],"BlurbText":[],"TranscriptBy":"Chris Bourne","ReviewScores":null,"CompilationReviewScores":[]}]}]