| SINCLAIR | English electrical engineer, inventor of the UK's first mass-market home computer and a battery electric vehicle (8) |
| TOSHIBA | Japanese tech company which produced T1100, the first mass-market laptop (7) |
| NEWENT | Gloucestershire market town, with black and white half-timbered buildings including the market house |
| EBIKE | It has two wheels and a battery |
| ROSSONWYE | Herefordshire town with a red sandstone market house |
| WANKEL | Felix ?, German engineer; inventor of a four-stroke internal-combustion engine |
| SLOUGH | Site of the UK's first trading estate (6) |
| ALPEN | Brand of the UK's first Swiss muesli in 1971 |
| THATCHER | Surname of the UK's first woman Prime Minister (8) |
| HEAVISIDE | Oliver ___, self-taught English electrical engineer, mathematician, and physicist who adapted complex numbers to the study of electrical circuits |
| MODEM | Combined device for modulation and demodulation (as between a computer and a telephone) |
| TABLET | Computer that is intermediate in size between a laptop computer and a smartphone. (6) |
| FERRANTI | Sebastian Ziani de --, 1864-1930, English electrical engineer and inventor (8) |
| SYNC | Match up like a computer and a smartphone |
| JANEEYRE | Work your English electrical engineer secures after a month |
| ACOUSTICCOUPLER | Modem between a computer and a telephone handset |
| SIKORSKY | Inspired by stories by Jules Verne and sketches by Leonardo da Vinci, inventor of the first mass-produced helicopter (8) |
| DJFRESH | English music producer, born Daniel Stein, responsible for the UK's first dubstep number one, Louder, featuring Sian Evans, and first drum and bass number one, Hot Right Now, featuring Rita Ora |
| ASTON | Which Nobel laureate, a British physicist, built the first mass spectrometer in 1919 and wrote Isotopes (1922)? (5) |
| ATARI | Pioneer company in arcade games, home video game consoles and home computers with a logo based on Mount Fuji |