The chips are down!
and you can WIN eight of them, plus the latest ROM board
WIN £300 worth of ROM based software and the ROM board
to put them on in this month's easy to enter competition.
The lucky winner of the competition will receive the following
eight ROMs:
A. Beeb Printer ROM - the machine code printer utility.
B. Wordwise - the incredibly successful word processor from Computer
Concepts.
C. Disc Doctor - the sophisticated disc utility ROM.
D. Beebfont - the ROM that allows you to define your own character
sets and print them out on an Epson printer.
E. Beebmon - the ROM based machine code monitor which allows
assembly language programs to be debugged and altered easily and
quickly.
F. Dump ROM - will dump all screen modes to an Epson printer.
Handles teletext graphics and double height characters.
G. Disassembler ROM - Watford's latest release.
H. The Watford DFS - claimed to be the most sophisticated DFS
software yet written for the BBC Micro.
And there's also the new version of the Watford ROMboard to
put them on!
All you have to do to win the lot is to list the eight ROMs
in their order of usefulness to the average user.
Then, as a tiebreaker, tell us, in not more than 25 words, the
piece of software that you would most like to see on ROM.
Send your entry, on the coupon below, to reach us no later than
March 29, 1984.
DECEMBER CONTEST WINNERS
THE prize for our December competition - three complete Micronet
systems - inspired many hundreds of readers to enter.
They had to describe the best use for an old 0.1 OS ROM. And
their imaginations ran riot.
Sorting through the entries was a mammoth task but we eventually
found three winners whose entries we give below:
• Sindy Old 0.1 ROM toast rack (see picture) - Sam and Wendy
Farr, Combe Haybath.

• For testing neurological function. Placed on the patient's
chair, the ROM detects ability to discriminate between 28 simultaneous
stimuli. If positive, the investigation indicates hysteria. -
Dr B. Bedford, Brocken hurst.
• To be issued to all those customers who are still waiting
for a second processor, so that they can have a chip on both shoulders.
- R.C. Todd, Royston.