The information was copied from an article in a Swedish computer magazine from that time. My memory only limited itself to knowing that there was an article about it.. which itself is not so bad.
There was "traditional" computer exchange on Swedish radio too those years. By traditional I mean that every program would only be runnable on one type of computer. Every week they tried to give a share to users of all the popular computers, sometimes even the same program in several versions. I believe I still have one or two of the VIC/C64 programs on tape, but I'm not sure exactly which one it is.. there goes my memory again.
BBC had a rough time entering the Swedish market. It was delayed due to interference (?!) problems, but I think I know the real reason; in the UK, Acorn developed the BBC according to specs for use in school and education. About when it was ready for export, Sweden was in the middle of designing our own unique (in more than one way) school computer, the infamous Compis project. If the telecommunications authority had let in BBC into the country before Compis was finished, some schools may have asked to get BBC instead. There already were some IBM PC, HP, C64, TI99 and other brands in a few schools, but nothing country-wide and official. OK, I know this is my personal conspiration, but why not?
Compis was interesting: 80186 based, on purpose not MS-DOS compatible, programmed in Comal or Pascal, much delayed, not utilizing the existing national computer industry, and finally released in a rush so most schools would not get a chance to object before it was delivered. Most machines probably eventually went as land fill, which makes it somewhat collectable IIUC.
On my notice board at home I have some graphic printout made on a Compis in the spring 1991. That was about the last time I saw one for real.