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A new incarnation of the company says it will deliver a new Commodore 64 – and the optimistic tech future we were promised.
An Apple II PC being sold by Commodore International in 1982? It came very close to happening, but luckily for Apple, Commodore rejected the idea, instead going with its revolutionary Commodore 64.
The Commodore 64 was a home computer running on an 8-bit processor released by Commodore International in 1982.
Back in the dawn of the PC era, Commodore International rejected a proposal from legendary Apple Inc. founders Steve Wozniak and Steve Jobs to resell the Apple II computer.
We’re talking about the Commodore 64, of course, the iconic 8-bit wonder that along with the other offerings from Commodore International served as the first real computer to millions of us.
An Apple II PC being sold by Commodore International in 1982? It came very close to happening, but luckily for Apple, Commodore rejected the idea, instead going with its revolutionary Commodore 64.
Commodore International Ltd. may be on ice, but one of the bankrupt company’s best-known products-the Amiga computer-is sizzling hot.Distributors are scouring the earth to find Amigas, which ...
Commodore International Ltd., of Westchester, Pa., Monday announced its first profitable quarter in a year and a half, along with a 58 percent jump in revenues for the period ended June 30. The ...
Jack Tramiel, the tough and aggressive Commodore International founder who brought millions of people into the world of personal computers in the late 1970s and early ‘80s with his low-cost PCs ...
Related article Streaming gaming will change the video game industry. Here's why Commodore sold more than 17 million of its C64 systems, according to the manufacturer Commodore International.
The Commodore 64 was a home computer running on an 8-bit processor released by Commodore International in 1982. The computer was one of the most popular models of all time, selling close to 17 ...
Related article Streaming gaming will change the video game industry. Here's why Commodore sold more than 17 million of its C64 systems, according to the manufacturer Commodore International.
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