16-bit
32-bit
68030
8-bit
ACube Systems Srl
AROS Research Operating System
ARexx
Adding machine
Advanced Graphics Architecture
Akiko (Amiga)
Ambient (desktop environment)
AmiKit
AmiZilla
Amiga
AmigaBASIC
AmigaDOS
AmigaOS
AmigaOS 4
AmigaOS 4#AmigaOS 4.1
AmigaOS versions#AmigaOS 2.0.2C 2.04.2C 2.05.2C 2.1
AmigaOS versions#AmigaOS 3.0.2C 3.1
AmigaOS versions#Kickstart.2FWorkbench 1.0.2C 1.1.2C 1.2.2C 1.3
AmigaOne
AmigaOne X1000
Amiga 1000
Amiga 1200
Amiga 1500
Amiga 2000
Amiga 2500
Amiga 3000
Amiga 3000T
Amiga 3000UX
Amiga 4000
Amiga 4000T
Amiga 500
Amiga 500 Plus
Amiga 600
Amiga Advanced Architecture chipset
Amiga Advanced Graphics Architecture
Amiga CD32
Amiga Chip RAM
Amiga Corporation
Amiga Disk File
Amiga Enhanced Chip Set
Amiga Fast File System
Amiga Forever
Amiga Hombre chipset
Amiga Hunk
Amiga Old File System
Amiga Ranger Chipset
Amiga Reflections
Amiga Unix
Amiga Walker
Amiga custom chips
Amiga demos
Amiga games
Amiga models and variants
Amiga software
Amiga software#Piracy
Amigaguide
Aminet
Apple Computer
Apple Macintosh
Atari
Atari Corp.
Atari ST
AtheOS
Auschwitz
Bahamas
Bankruptcy
BeOS
Blitter (OCS)
Blitter object
Byte Magazine
C64 Direct-to-TV
CD-ROM
CDTV
Calculator
Canada
Chuck Peddle
CommodoreWorld
Commodore 128
Commodore 16
Commodore 64
Commodore 64 Games System
Commodore 65
Commodore 900
Commodore AA+ Chipset
Commodore Amiga
Commodore BASIC
Commodore CBM-II
Commodore CDTV
Commodore DOS
Commodore Educator 64
Commodore Gaming
Commodore International
Commodore International#Product line
Commodore International Corporation
Commodore LCD
Commodore MAX Machine
32-bit
68030
8-bit
ACube Systems Srl
AROS Research Operating System
ARexx
Adding machine
Advanced Graphics Architecture
Akiko (Amiga)
Ambient (desktop environment)
AmiKit
AmiZilla
Amiga
AmigaBASIC
AmigaDOS
AmigaOS
AmigaOS 4
AmigaOS 4#AmigaOS 4.1
AmigaOS versions#AmigaOS 2.0.2C 2.04.2C 2.05.2C 2.1
AmigaOS versions#AmigaOS 3.0.2C 3.1
AmigaOS versions#Kickstart.2FWorkbench 1.0.2C 1.1.2C 1.2.2C 1.3
AmigaOne
AmigaOne X1000
Amiga 1000
Amiga 1200
Amiga 1500
Amiga 2000
Amiga 2500
Amiga 3000
Amiga 3000T
Amiga 3000UX
Amiga 4000
Amiga 4000T
Amiga 500
Amiga 500 Plus
Amiga 600
Amiga Advanced Architecture chipset
Amiga Advanced Graphics Architecture
Amiga CD32
Amiga Chip RAM
Amiga Corporation
Amiga Disk File
Amiga Enhanced Chip Set
Amiga Fast File System
Amiga Forever
Amiga Hombre chipset
Amiga Hunk
Amiga Old File System
Amiga Ranger Chipset
Amiga Reflections
Amiga Unix
Amiga Walker
Amiga custom chips
Amiga demos
Amiga games
Amiga models and variants
Amiga software
Amiga software#Piracy
Amigaguide
Aminet
Apple Computer
Apple Macintosh
Atari
Atari Corp.
Atari ST
AtheOS
Auschwitz
Bahamas
Bankruptcy
BeOS
Blitter (OCS)
Blitter object
Byte Magazine
C64 Direct-to-TV
CD-ROM
CDTV
Calculator
Canada
Chuck Peddle
CommodoreWorld
Commodore 128
Commodore 16
Commodore 64
Commodore 64 Games System
Commodore 65
Commodore 900
Commodore AA+ Chipset
Commodore Amiga
Commodore BASIC
Commodore CBM-II
Commodore CDTV
Commodore DOS
Commodore Educator 64
Commodore Gaming
Commodore International
Commodore International#Product line
Commodore International Corporation
Commodore LCD
Commodore MAX Machine
Commodore International
Industry
Computer hardware
Electronics
Founded
Toronto, Ontario, Canada (1954)
Headquarters
West Chester, Pennsylvania, United States
Key people
Jack Tramiel (Founder)
Irving Gould (Main investor and chairman)
Products
Commodore PET
Commodore VIC 20
Commodore 64
Commodore 128
Amiga
Others
Commodore is the commonly used name for Commodore Business Machines (CBM), the U.S.-based home computer manufacturer and electronics manufacturer headquartered in West Chester, Pennsylvania, which also housed Commodore's corporate parent company, Commodore International Limited. Commodore played a vital role in the development of the home–personal computer industry in the 1980s. Commodore developed and marketed the world's best-selling desktop computer, the Commodore 64 (1982).
The company declared bankruptcy in 1994 and since then there have been several attempts to revive its Amiga systems. The brand revived in 2005 after a few mergers with Yeahronimo Media Ventures Inc., SATXS Communications BV, and Tulip Computers.
Contents
1 History
1.1 Founding and early years
1.2 "Computers for the masses, not the classes"
1.3 Tramiel quits; The Amiga vs. ST battle
1.4 Demise and bankruptcy
1.5 Post-Commodore International, Ltd.
2 Product line
2.1 Calculators
2.2 Computer Accessories
2.3 Tablet Monitors
2.4 Media Players
2.5 Computers
2.6 Games Consoles
2.7 Televisions
2.8 Software
3 Notes
4 References
5 External links
History
Founding and early years
Original Commodore logo: all-lowercase company name (1962–1984).
Commodore PR-100 programmable calculator
The company that would become Commodore Business Machines, Inc. was founded in 19541 in Toronto as the Commodore Portable Typewriter Company by Polish immigrant and Auschwitz survivor Jack Tramiel. For a few years he had been living in New York, driving a taxicab and running a small business repairing typewriters, when he managed to sign a deal with a Czechoslovakian company to manufacture their designs in Canada. He moved to Toronto to start production. By the late 1950s a wave of Japanese machines forced most North American typewriter companies to cease business, but Tramiel instead turned to adding machines.
In 1955, the company was formally incorporated as Commodore Business Machines, Inc. (CBM) in Canada. In 1962, Commodore went public at New York stock exchange under the name of Commodore International Limited. In the late 1960s history repeated itself when Japanese firms started producing and exporting adding machines. The company's main investor and chairman, Irving Gould, suggested that Tramiel travel to Japan to understand how to compete. Instead, he returned with the new idea to produce electronic calculators, which were just coming on the market.
Commodore resident confronts burglar during rash of break-ins
The Commodore neighborhood off High School Road had seven homes broken into early last Friday morning, according to Bainbridge Island Police.
El Commodore Amiga A 500 Plus la mosca de la esquina derecha sobre el teclado dice Commodore A 500 Plus tambin conocido como A500 Plus o simplemente A500+ es una versin mejorada del original Amiga 500 Computer Es notable por introducir nuevas versiones del
http://wiki.museo8bits.es/wiki/index.php/Commodore_Amiga_A-500_Plus
Commodore International: Information from Answers.com
Commodore International Ltd. produces the Amiga multimedia line of computers, a range of PC-compatible computers, and the entry-level Commodore 64 system. ...
Commodore soon had a profitable calculator line and was one of the more popular brands in the early 1970s, producing both consumer as well as scientific/programmable calculators. However, in 1975, Texas Instruments, the main supplier of calculator parts, entered the market directly and put out a line of machines priced at less than Commodore's cost for the parts. Commodore had to be rescued once again by an infusion of cash from Gould, which Tramiel used beginning in 1976 to purchase several second-source chip suppliers, including MOS Technology, Inc., in order to assure his supply. He agreed to buy MOS, which was having troubles of its own, only on the condition that its chip designer Chuck Peddle join Commodore directly as head of engineering.
In December 2007 when Tramiel was visiting the Computer History Museum in Mountain View, California, for the 25th anniversary of the Commodore 64, he was asked why he called his company Commodore. He said: "I wanted to call my company General, but there's so many Generals in the U.S.: General Electric, General Motors. Then I went to Admiral, but that was taken. So I wind up in Berlin, Germany, with my wife, and we were in a cab, and the cab made a short stop, and in front of us was an Opel Commodore."2 Tramiel gave this account in many interviews, but Opel's Commodore didn't debut until 1967, years after the company had been named.3
"Computers for the masses, not the classes"
Commodore PET 2001 (1977)
Once Chuck Peddle had taken over engineering at Commodore, he convinced Jack Tramiel that calculators were already a dead end and that they should turn their attention to home computers. Peddle packaged his existing KIM-1 single-board computer design in a metal case, along with a full-travel QWERTY keyboard, monochrome monitor, and tape recorder for program and data storage, to produce the Commodore PET (Personal Electronic Transactor). From PET's 1977 debut, Commodore would be a computer company.
Commodore had been reorganized the year before into Commodore International, Ltd., moving its financial headquarters to the Bahamas and its operational headquarters to West Chester, Pennsylvania, near to the MOS Technology site. The operational headquarters, where research and development of new products occurred, retained the name Commodore Business Machines, Inc.
The PET computer line was used primarily in schools, due to its tough all-metal construction (some models were labeled "Teacher's PET"), but did not compete well in the home setting where graphics and sound were important. This was addressed with the introduction of the VIC-20 in 1981, which was introduced at a cost of US$299 and sold in retail stores. Commodore took out aggressive ads featuring William Shatner asking consumers "Why buy just a video game?" The strategy worked and the VIC-20 became the first computer to ship more than one million units. A total of 2.5 million units were sold over the machine's lifetime.4
Commodore 64 (1982)
East meets West in Delhi 2 Dublin
Mixing bhangra, Celtic music and DJs, Delhi 2 Dublin performs at the Commodore during the Vancouver International Bhangra Celebration marking the release of the band’s new album, Planet Electric.
home
Commodore was a pioneer in the computer industry bringing to market ... Between 1982 and 1994 17 million units of the Commodore C64 were sold. ...
In 1982, Commodore introduced the Commodore 64 as the successor to the VIC-20. Thanks to a well-designed set of chips designed by MOS Technology, the Commodore 64, (also referred to as C64), possessed remarkable sound and graphics for its time and is often credited with starting the computer demo scene. Its US$595 price was high compared with that of the VIC-20, but it was still much less expensive than any other 64K computer on the market. Early C64 ads boasted, "You can't buy a better computer at twice the price."
Australian ads used a tune speaking the words "Are you keeping up with the commodore? Because the commodore is keeping up with you. "
In 1983, Tramiel decided to focus on market share and cut the price of the VIC-20 and C64 dramatically, starting what would be called the "home computer war." TI responded by cutting prices on its TI-99/4A, which had been introduced in 1981. Soon there was an all-out price war involving Commodore, TI, Atari and practically every vendor other than Apple Computer. By the end of this conflict, Commodore had shipped somewhere around 22 million C64s—making the C64 the best selling computer of all time.
Tramiel quits; The Amiga vs. ST battle
Second Commodore logo, with mixed-case company name (1985–1994).
Commodore's board of directors were as impacted as anyone else by the price spiral and decided they wanted out. An internal power struggle resulted; in January 1984, Tramiel resigned. He founded a new company, Tramel Technology (spelled differently so people would pronounce it correctly), and hired away a number of Commodore engineers to begin work on a next-generation computer design.
Now it was left to the remaining Commodore management to salvage the company's fortunes and plan for the future. It did so by buying a small startup company called Amiga Corporation in August 1984, for $25 million ($12.8 million in cash & 550,000 in common shares) which became a subsidiary of Commodore, called Commodore-Amiga, Inc.5 Commodore brought this new 32-bit computer design (initially codenamed "Lorraine", later dubbed the Amiga 1000) to market in the fall of 1985 for US $1295.
But Tramiel had beaten Commodore to the punch. His design was 95% completed by June (which fueled speculation that his engineers had taken technology with them from Commodore). In July 1984 he bought the consumer side of Atari Inc. from Warner Communications which allowed him to strike back and release the Atari ST earlier in 1985 for about $800.
During development in 1983, Amiga had exhausted venture capital and was desperate for more financing. Jay Miner and company had approached former employer Atari, and the "Warner owned" Atari had paid Amiga to continue development work.6 In return Atari was to get one-year exclusive use of the design as a video game console. After one year Atari would have the right to add a keyboard and market the complete Amiga computer. The Atari Museum has acquired the Atari-Amiga contract and Atari engineering logs revealing that the Atari Amiga was originally designated as the 1850XLD. As Atari was heavily involved with Disney at the time, it was later code-named "Mickey", and the 256K memory expansion board was codenamed "Minnie".7
Urban groove
KId Koala, right, and The Slew performed a jazz fest gig at the Commodore June 29 as part of a cross-Canada tour.
Commodore International Corporate Travel
Commodore International Travel serves the travel needs of large and small companies in the UK. We pride ourselves on our service and technological ...
The following year, Tramiel discovered that Warner Communications wanted to sell Atari, which was rumored to be losing about $10,000 a day. Interested in Atari's overseas manufacturing and worldwide distribution network for his new computer, he approached Atari and entered negotiations. After several on-again/off-again talks with Atari in May and June 1984, Tramiel had secured his funding and bought Atari's Consumer Division (which included the console and home computer departments) in July.
As more execs and researchers left Commodore after the announcement to join up with Tramiel's new company Atari Corp., Commodore followed by filing lawsuits against four former engineers for theft of trade secrets in late July. This was intended, in effect, to bar Tramiel from releasing his new computer.
One of Tramiel's first acts after forming Atari Corp. was to fire most of Atari's remaining staff, and to cancel almost all ongoing projects, in order to review their continued viability. In late July/early August, Tramiel representatives discovered the original Amiga contract from the previous fall. Seeing a chance to gain some leverage, Tramiel immediately used the contract to counter-sue Commodore through its new subsidiary, Amiga, on August 13.
The Amiga crew, still suffering serious financial problems, had sought more monetary support from investors that entire spring. At around the same time that Tramiel was in negotiations with Atari, Amiga entered into discussions with Commodore. The discussions ultimately led to Commodore's intentions to purchase Amiga outright, which would (from Commodore's viewpoint) cancel any outstanding contracts - including Atari Inc.'s. This "interpretation" is what Tramiel used to counter-sue, and sought damages and an injunction to bar Amiga (and effectively Commodore) from producing any resembling technology. This was an attempt to render Commodore's new acquisition (and the source for its next generation of computers) useless. The resulting court case lasted for several years, with both companies releasing their respective products. By March 1987 they had settled out of court, with all suits against Tramiel's engineers dropped. His "Business is War" tactics had succeeded again.
Amiga 500 (1987)
Throughout the life of the ST and Amiga platforms, a ferocious Atari-Commodore rivalry raged. While this rivalry was in many ways a holdover from the days when the Commodore 64 had first challenged the Atari 800 (among others) in a series of scathing television commercials, the events leading to the launch of the ST and Amiga only served to further alienate fans of each computer, who fought vitriolic holy wars on the question of which platform was superior. This was reflected in sales numbers for the two platforms until the release of the Amiga 500 in 1987 which led the Amiga sales to exceed the ST by about 1.5 to 1,citation needed despite reaching the market later. However, the battle was in vain, as neither platform captured a significant share of the world computer market and only the Apple Macintosh would survive the industry-wide shift to Microsoft Windows running on PC clones.
Demise and bankruptcy
Rob Oller commentary: Subtract Commodore, and the wins start to add up
Dave King speaks fluent international hockey, having settled as a coach in six countries over a 38-year career. The first coach of the Blue Jackets can describe a spectacular shot in multiple languages, including his native Canadian English (what a goal, eh?), American English (nice goal, dude), French ( qu'est-ce qu'un but), German ( was fr ein Ziel) and Swedish ( vad ett ml).
op de gamingmarkt Vandaag presenteerde Commodore International Corporation CIC de machines op de CeBIT in Hannover Het gaat om zware gaming pc s met een ingebouwde C64 emulator CIC zal voorlopig een viertal modellen op de markt brengen Het topmodel de Cxx heeft inderdaad de specificaties van een gaming pc Het moederbord is een Asus P5N32 E gebaseerd op de
http://www.techzine.nl/nieuws/12050/CeBIT:-Commodore-presenteert-gaming-PCs.html
Commodore International - Wikimedia Commons
Pictures of computers and other devices of Commodore International ... Commodore 64 (artistic closup) Commodore 64 'Breadbin' Commodore 64. Commodore 64C system ...
In the 1970s and early 1980s, the computer press had often sought Commodore, one of the industry's leading players, and its colorful management for information. The VIC-20 and C64, although aggressively marketed, were arguably more successful because of their price than their marketing. After Tramiel's departure, Commodore executives shied away from mass advertising and other marketing ploys, fearful of repeating past mistakes. Commodore also retreated from its earlier strategy of selling its computers to discount outlets and toy stores, and now favored authorized dealers.
By the late 1980s, the personal computer market had become dominated by the IBM PC and Apple Macintosh platforms. Commodore's marketing efforts for the Amiga were less competitive and seemed half-hearted and unfocused. The company also concentrated on consumer products that would not see a demand for another few years—including a digital TV system called CDTV.
In the early 1990s, CBM continued selling Amigas with 7–14 MHz 68000-family CPUs (even though Amiga 3000 with 25 MHz 68030 was in the market by that time), when PCs with 33 MHz 486s, high-color graphics cards and SoundBlaster (or compatible) sound cards offered comparable, and eventually higher, performance, albeit at higher prices. By way of contrast, when introduced in 1985, the Amiga had competed favorably against 286-based systems with EGA graphics and rudimentary sound capabilities that frequently cost 2–3 times as much.
In 1992, the production of the A600 seemed like a backward move; it replaced the A500, yet it removed the numeric keypad, Zorro expansion slot, SCSI capability, and other functionality in favor of PCMCIA and a theoretically cost-reduced design. It was basically unexpandable and lasted less than a year. Productivity developers moved to PC and Macintosh, while the console wars took over the gaming market. David Pleasance, managing director of Commodore UK, described the A600 as a 'complete and utter screw-up'. (Smith, 1994)
In late 1992, Amiga hardware began to reach parity with PCs with the release of the A4000 and A1200 computers, which featured an improved graphics chipset, the AGA. By this point, both the IBM PC and Apple Macintosh had a much larger market share than the Amiga platform. As software developers shifted to these platforms, the Amiga lost value for mainstream consumers. The custom-designed and custom-built AGA chipset also cost Commodore considerably more than the commodity chips used in IBM PCs, further reducing Commodore's profit margins. Common wisdom was that even though the AGA clearly improved upon the original chipset (OCS), it never returned to Amiga the clear dominance of multimedia computing that it once promised.
Software piracy has often been given by trade publications and user groups as the reason for the Amiga's demise, but this view is controversialcitation needed. For information on the specific challenges in the Amiga market of the time, see the Amiga Software article.
Electric Commodore could pull the plug on petrol guzzlers
A cleanly swept corner of a busy Port Melbourne warehouse is poised to become the birthplace of Australia's own electric production car.
Channel or at retail outlets This week s new games are WiiWare Onslaught Hudson Entertainment 1 4 players Rated T for Teen Animated Blood Violence 1 000 Wii Points Onslaught is an FPS that puts you in the middle of a futuristic war between humans and insectoid aliens Become part of the Elite Interstellar Strike Force and fight against an
http://www.gamedibs.com/dibs/news/wii/wii-shop-channel-adds-wiiware-fps-and-3-virtual-console-games
Commodore International
Commodore is the commonly used name for Commodore International, a West Chester, Pennsylvania based electronics company who was a vital player in ...
In 1994, the 'make or break' system, according to Pleasance, was the 32-bit CD-ROM-based game console: the CD32, but it was not sufficiently profitable to put Commodore back in the black.
In the early 1990s, all servicing and warranty repairs were outsourced to Wang Laboratories. By 1994, only its operations in Germany and the United Kingdom were still profitable. Commodore declared bankruptcy on April 29, 1994, and its assets were liquidated. The former site of Commodore's operational headquarters in West Chester, Pennsylvania, now houses the headquarters and broadcast studios of leading cable retailer QVC, Inc. (On November 26, 2004, QVC became the first retailer to sell the DTV, a "C64 in a joystick" designed by Jeri Ellsworth.)
The company's computer systems, especially the C64 and Amiga series, retain a cult-following among their users years after its demise.
Post-Commodore International, Ltd.
Following its liquidation, Commodore's former assets went their separate ways, with none of the descendant companies repeating Commodore's early success.
“
"Commodore's high point was the Amiga 1000 (1985). The Amiga was so far ahead of its time that almost nobody--including Commodore's marketing department--could fully articulate what it was all about. Today, it's obvious the Amiga was the first multimedia computer, but in those days it was derided as a game machine because few people grasped the importance of advanced graphics, sound, and video. Nine years later, vendors are still struggling to make systems that work like 1985 Amigas.
--Byte Magazine, August 1994
”
Commodore UK was the only subsidiary to survive the bankruptcy and even placed a bid to buy out the rest of the operation, or at least the former parent company. For a time it was considered the front runner in the bid, and numerous reports (all false), surfaced during the 1994–1995 time frame that Commodore UK had made the purchase. Commodore UK stayed in business by selling old inventory and making computer speakers and some other types of computer peripherals. However, Commodore UK lost its financial backing after several larger companies, including Gateway Computers and Dell Inc., became interested, primarily for Commodore's 47 patents relating to the Amiga. Ultimately, the successful bidder was German PC conglomerate Escom, and Commodore UK was absorbed into Escom in mid-1995.
Escom paid US$14 million for Commodore International, primarily for the Commodore brand name. It separated the Commodore and Amiga operations into separate divisions and quickly started using the brand name on a line of PCs sold in Europe. However, it soon started losing money due to over-expansion, went bankrupt on July 15, 1996, and was liquidated.
In September 1997, the Commodore brand name was acquired by Dutch computer maker Tulip Computers NV. Tulip's ownership was largely academic until July 11, 2003, when Tulip announced it would re-launch the Commodore name, including new Commodore 64-related products, and threatened legal action against commercial Web sites that used the computer's name without a license. On 18 June 2004, Tulip introduced the website CommodoreWorld.com (see external links, below), run by its new daughter company Commodore International BV.
A Change at the Top for Naval Support Command
After three years as Deputy Chief of Navy, Commodore Bruce Pepperell will relinquish command to Commodore Wayne Burroughs at an impressive Change of Command Ceremony.
processeur Intel Q6600 d Intel 2 4 GHz 2Go de RAM Corsair etc Je vous invite consulter le test de cette machine Commodore sur PCINpact pour en savoir plus au sujet de la bte Extrait Pour les djeunz honteusement ignorants qui ne connatraient pas la marque Commodore International est l origine une entreprise amricaine fonde en 1954 qui a
http://www.bhmag.fr/envoi-actu-6389.html
Commodore International - Wikipedia, la enciclopedia libre
Commodore, el nombre común usado para la empresa Commodore International, fue ... Commodore desarrolló y comercializó el ordenador de sobremesa más vendido a nivel mundial, ...
The Commodore brand name also resurfaced in late 2003 on an inexpensive portable MP3 player made in the People's Republic of China by Tai Guen Enterprise, sold mostly in Europe. However, the device's connection to Tulip, the legal owners of the name, is unclear.
In July 2004, Tulip announced a new series of products using the Commodore name: fPET, a flash memory-based USB Flash drive; mPET, a flash-based MP3 Player and digital recorder; eVIC, a 20 GB music player; and the C64 DTV.
In late 2004, Tulip sold the Commodore name to Yeahronimo Media Ventures for €22 million.8 The sale was completed in March 2005 after months of negotiations.
The Commodore Semiconductor Group (formerly MOS Technology, Inc.) was bought by its former management and in 1995, resumed operations under the name GMT Microelectronics, utilizing a troubled facility in Norristown, Pennsylvania that Commodore had closed in 1992. By 1999 it had $21 million in revenues and 183 employees. However, in 2001 the United States Environmental Protection Agency shut the plant down. GMT ceased operations and was liquidated.
Ownership of the Amiga line passed through a few companies, from Escom of Germany in 1995, and then to U.S. PC clone maker Gateway in 1997, before an exclusive lifetime license was made to Amiga, Inc., a Washington company founded by former Gateway employees Bill McEwen and Fleecy Moss in 2000. On March 15, 2004, Amiga, Inc. announced that on April 23, 2003 it had transferred its rights over past and future versions of the Amiga OS (but not over other intellectual property) to Itec, LLC, later acquired by KMOS, Inc., a Delaware company. On March 16, 2005, KMOS, Inc. announced that it had completed all registrations with the State of Delaware to change its corporate name to Amiga, Inc.
Commodore Gaming was formed to reintroduce the brand to the booming gaming PC market, after jointly acquiring the Commodore name with Commodore International Corporation in 2005.9 At the CeBIT 2007 show in Germany, four new gaming geared PCs were introduced, named Cg, Cgs, Cgx and Cxx. These are described as ranging from an entry level gaming PC to an “extreme specification model”. Each machine runs Windows Vista with customization from a range of high end components and peripherals.
Product line
Calculators
774D, 9R23, C110, F4146R, MM3, M55, P50, PR100, SR1800, SR4120D, SR4120R, SR4148D, SR4148R, SR4190R, SR4212, SR4912, SR4921RPN, SR5120D, SR5120R, SR5148D, SR5148R, SR5190R, SR59, SR7919, SR7949, SR9150R, SR9190R, US*3
Computer Accessories
Includes Keyboards, Mice, Headphones, and various adapters.
Tablet Monitors
CTL-15
CTL-19
Media Players
Gravel In Home
Gravel In Pocket
Computers
(listed chronologically)
Commodore KIM-1 - single board computer
Commodore PET/CBM range
Commodore VIC-20 - aka VC-20 and VIC-1001
Commodore CBM-II range - aka B-range aka 600/700 range
Commodore MAX Machine - Predecessor to C64
Commodore 64 - including C64C
Commodore Educator 64 - 64 in a PET 40xx case
Commodore SX-64 - all-in-one portable C64 including screen and disk drive
Commodore 16 - including C116, incompatible with C64
Commodore Plus/4 - compatible with C16
Commodore LCD - LCD-equipped laptop (never released)
Commodore 128 - including 128D and 128DCR
Commodore 65 - C64 successor (never released)
Commodore 900 (never released)
Commodore Amiga range
Amiga 1000
Amiga 500 - incl A500+
Amiga 1500
Amiga 2000 - incl A2000HD
Amiga 2500
Amiga 3000 - incl A3000UX & A3000T
Commodore CDTV
Amiga 600
Amiga 1200
Amiga 4000 - incl A4000T
Commodore PC compatible systems - Commodore Colt, PC1, PC10, PC20, PC30, PC40, ..., 486SX-LTC
Netbooks
8010C
8020F
8030J
MID430
8010C-N280
CF 901-N270
Laptop/Notebook
CFFT-20
CF-PD
Pen Touch Computer
CPT-19
CPT-10
Games Consoles
Commodore 64 Games System
Amiga CD32
Televisions
CFTV-19
CFTV-23
Software
AmigaOS - Operating system for the Amiga range; multitasking, microkernel, GUI
Amiga Unix - Operating system for the Amiga, based on Unix System V Release 4
Commodore BASIC - BASIC interpreter for the 8-bit range, ROM resident; based on Microsoft BASIC
Commodore DOS - Disk operating system for the 8-bit range; embedded in disk drive ROMs
KERNAL - Core OS routines for the 8-bit range; ROM resident
Simons' BASIC - BASIC extension for the C64; cartridge-based
Super Expander - BASIC and memory extension for the VIC-20; cartridge-based
Super Expander 64 - BASIC extension for the C64
Contiki - A networked multitasking OS for resource constrained computers. www.c64web.com/contiki 10
Notes
Tim Smith and Chris Lloyd (1994), "Chewing the Facts", 'Amiga Format' Annual 1994, 106-111, 107.
Boris Kretzinger: Commodore - Aufstieg und Fall eines Computerriesen, Skriptorium-Verlag, 2005, ISBN 3-938199-04-0.
References
^ "Commodore International B.V.: Private Company Information". Investing.businessweek.com. 2008-09-17. http://investing.businessweek.com/businessweek/research/stocks/private/snapshot.asp?privcapId=262677. Retrieved 2009-08-10.
^ Software Development Times (January 1, 2008), Page 10.
^ Kretzinger, Boris: Commodore - Aufstieg und Fall eines Computerriesen, Morschen 2005, p. 14, Fn 18.
^ Bagnall, Brian. On the Edge: The Spectacular Rise and Fall of Commodore, Variant Press. Page 221. ISBN 0-9738649-0-7
^ David Needle. "Special Report" p.90 Personal Computing, (August 1985)
^ "TOP SECRET: Confidential Atari-Amiga Agreement". Atari Historical Society. November 1983. http://www.atarimuseum.com/articles/mickey.html. Retrieved 2006-07-23.
^ ""Confidential Atari-Amiga Agreement" and "Afterthoughts: The Atari 1600XL Rumor"". Archives.atarimuseum.com. http://archives.atarimuseum.com/archives/archives.html. Retrieved 2009-08-10.
^ http://www.theregister.com/2004/12/29/tulip_sells_commodore/
^ "Who?". Commodore Gaming. http://www.commodoregaming.com/pcshop/About+Commodore+gaming/About+Commodore+gaming.aspx. Retrieved 2009-08-10.
^ http://www.c64web.com/contiki.html
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to: Commodore International
Commodore International Corporation - Commodore Asia. Co-owner of the Commodore brand.
Commodore Gaming - Co-owner of the Commodore brand and maker of Commodore-branded gaming PCs.
Commodore World
Commodore USA
Software Archive
Chronological History of Commodore Computer – by Larry Anderson
The Canonical List of Commodore Products – by Jim Brain, maintained by Bo Zimmerman
v · d · eList of Commodore microcomputers
6502-based (8-bit)
MOS/CBM KIM-1 · PET/CBM · CBM-II (aka B/P series) · VIC-20/VC-20 · C64 · SX-64 · Educator 64 · C16 & 116 · Plus/4 · C128
68000-based (16-bit / 32-bit)
Amiga 1000 · Amiga 500 · Amiga 2000 (Amiga 2500) · Amiga 1500 · Amiga CDTV · Amiga CD32 · Amiga 3000 · (Amiga 3000UX · Amiga 3000T) · Amiga 500+ · Amiga 600 · Amiga 1200 · Amiga 4000 · Amiga 4000T
v · d · eAmiga companies
Property owner
Amiga, Inc.
Original developer
Amiga Corporation
Mainly software
Grasshopper LLC • Haage & Partner • Hyperion Entertainment • Runesoft GmbH
Other companies
ACube Systems Srl • Amiga, Inc. (South Dakota) • Commodore International • Commodore Asia • Escom • Eyetech • Gateway, Inc. • Phase5 • Xetec
v · d · eAmiga hardware (history)
Amiga models
680x0 based
CD32 · CDTV · A500 · A500Plus · A600 · A1000 · A1200 · A1500 · A2000 · A2500 · A3000 · A3000T · A3000UX · A4000 · A4000T
PowerPC based
A1-SE · A1-XE · Micro-A1 · AmigaOne X1000
Amiga clones
Minimig · Natami
Unofficial models
Pegasos II · Sam440ep · Sam440ep-flex · Sam460ex
Amiga prototypes
Walker · A5000
Amiga chipsets
OCS · ARC · ECS · AGA · AAA · AA+ · Hombre · (Agnus · Alice · Denise · Lisa · Paula · Blitter · Copper · Akiko · others)
Other hardware
Action Replay · Chip/Fast RAM · Flicker fixer · Kickstart ROM
v · d · eAmigaOS
Amiga technologies
AmigaBASIC • AmigaDOS • Amigaguide • ARexx • Blitter object • Exec/WarpOS • Guru Meditation • Hunk • Intuition • Kickstart • RAM disk • Workbench
Amiga GUIs
Ambient • MUI • ReAction • Scalos • Wanderer • Workbench • Zune
File systems
CrossDOS • OFS • FFS • PFS • SFS • UDF • JXFS (Amiga OS4.1 only) • IceFS (MorphOS only)
OS versions
68k based: 1.0, 1.1, 1.2, 1.3, 1.4 (beta) • 2.0, 2.04, 2.05, 2.1 • 3.0, 3.1, 3.5, 3.9
PowerPC based: 4.0, 4.1
Software packs
Amiga Forever • AmigaSYS • AmiKit
Other software
Aminet • Amiga Reflections • Demos • Games • Hollywood • Web browsers • ADF • IFF • LHA • WHDLoad • WinUAE • YAM • (AmiZilla)
Influenced
AfA • AROS • AtheOS • BeOS • DragonFly BSD • MorphOS
Indoor Leagues Offer Cold-Weather Solutions for Tennis Players, Oarsmen
With the coming of spring, many after-work and weekend athletes may be looking forward to the warm weather with mixed feelings. On the one hand, they know the lure of green fairways and dry tennis courts. On the other, all those stiff muscles have been lying dormant all winter.
the definition a bit On top of that it didn t have a battery so it still had to be plugged into an AC outlet And the screen was well let s face it 5 inches isn t much to look at Hunch over and squint if you love SX 64s The system was almost completely compatible with the C64 although it lacked a cassette port The OS had a cosmetic change of reversing the C64 s
http://www.secumania.org/news/hardware/remembering-the-commodore-sx~64-2008011939824
Commodore Asia
Commodore International Corp and Asiarim Corporation Announce Joint ... Commodore was a pioneer in the computer industry bringing to market the Commodore C64 which was the most ...
This Time We're Going for the Win
Cambridge driver Nick Ross believes that by unlocking the full potential of the Holden's new controlled suspension parts he will be in a position to producing another BNT V8s podium finish in the Total Lubricants Commodore this weekend.
Failure Case For ENTR200 Class Discussion
Commodore, the commonly used name for Commodore International, was ... Commodore had been reorganized the year before into Commodore International, Ltd. ...
Palm Coast Yacht Club has change of command
The Palm Coast Yacht Club installed its 2011 officers at the annual change Of watch ceremony in late January. The event was organized by the Palm Coast Chapter of the International Order of the Blue Gavel; the association of past commodores. The new officers are: Commodore Bob Bescher; vice commodore Bruce Hinman; rear commodore Judy Susler; fleet captain John Byrd; treasurer Candy Schmidt; and ...
Holden Commodore International Special Edition | Car Advice ...
Holden Commodore Special Edition International Sedan and Sportwagon ... The International sedan and Sportwagon models will deliver $7,500 of extra ...
The Gloucester County Times
Governor Chris Christie held a town hall meeting in West Deptford. CAMDEN The Delaware River Port Authority apparently does not believe in the groundhog as a weather forecaster.
















