Castelle
20th May 2008, 14:43
Hi all,
Took delivery today of a fantastic new book.
On The Edge: The spectacular rise and fall of Commodore by Brian Bignall.
On the cover is a picture of the classic Commodore 64 -- anyway, it says this inside the dust jacket...
Between 1976 and 1994, Commodore had astounding success in the nascent personal computer business. Amid the chaos and infighting, Commodore was able to achieve some remarkable industry firsts. They were the first major company to show a personal computer, even before Apple and Radio Shack. They sold a million computers before anyone else. No single computer has sold more than the Commodore 64. The first true multimedia computer, the Amiga, came from Commodore. Yet with all these milestones, Commodore receives almost no credit as a pioneer.
Commodore was one of the only companies with the ability to make silicon, and the results were obvious. They had more creativity, more colour, and more character than the competition. While Apple and IBM charged exorbitant prices, Commodore was able to reach the masses with affordable computers while remaining profitable.
The Commodore 64 cut a path of destruction through the early industry, knocking Tandy, Texas Instruments, Sinclair, and Atari out of the computer business and badly hurting Apple and even IBM. While other companies received more press, Commodore sold more computers.
Yet Commodore never reached a comfortable position. They were always on the verge of blinding success or abysmal failure. Commodore's Volatile founder, Jack Tramiel, lived on the edge, and he made sure his employees lived there too.
You can order it online here for US residents : http://www.variantpress.com/books/on-the-edge
And you can order it from Amazon for UK residents :
http://www.amazon.co.uk
Took delivery today of a fantastic new book.
On The Edge: The spectacular rise and fall of Commodore by Brian Bignall.
On the cover is a picture of the classic Commodore 64 -- anyway, it says this inside the dust jacket...
Between 1976 and 1994, Commodore had astounding success in the nascent personal computer business. Amid the chaos and infighting, Commodore was able to achieve some remarkable industry firsts. They were the first major company to show a personal computer, even before Apple and Radio Shack. They sold a million computers before anyone else. No single computer has sold more than the Commodore 64. The first true multimedia computer, the Amiga, came from Commodore. Yet with all these milestones, Commodore receives almost no credit as a pioneer.
Commodore was one of the only companies with the ability to make silicon, and the results were obvious. They had more creativity, more colour, and more character than the competition. While Apple and IBM charged exorbitant prices, Commodore was able to reach the masses with affordable computers while remaining profitable.
The Commodore 64 cut a path of destruction through the early industry, knocking Tandy, Texas Instruments, Sinclair, and Atari out of the computer business and badly hurting Apple and even IBM. While other companies received more press, Commodore sold more computers.
Yet Commodore never reached a comfortable position. They were always on the verge of blinding success or abysmal failure. Commodore's Volatile founder, Jack Tramiel, lived on the edge, and he made sure his employees lived there too.
You can order it online here for US residents : http://www.variantpress.com/books/on-the-edge
And you can order it from Amazon for UK residents :
http://www.amazon.co.uk