In July 1985, Commodore released an impressive new multimedia PC called the Amiga. This system, once the object of a legal fight between Atari and Commodore, made waves in the press with its ...
Thirty years ago, on July 23, 1985, Commodore took to the stage in New York to reveal the Amiga 1000, a personal computer with unprecedented multimedia capabilities and an intuitive interface that ...
Forget the Apple Macintosh, Ridley Scott, and "1984." As computer launches go, we'll take the Commodore Amiga, Andy Warhol, and Debbie Harry. In January 1984---as the entire Western World is well ...
Commodore's iconic Amiga computer was first made available 30 years ago. The Amiga A1000 was launched on 23 rd July 1985. However it wasn't until the cheaper Amiga 500 launched in 1987 that it really ...
The Amiga has a lot of fans, and rightly so. The machine broke a lot of ground. However, according to [Dave Farquhar], one of the most popular models today — the Amiga 600 — was reviled in 1992 by ...
It’s 30 years since Commodore launched its powerful Amiga 1000 computer, ushering in the era of Worms, Lemmings and myriad other Britsoft classics In 1985 my family made a terrible mistake – a mistake ...
It's 30 years to the day since Commodore unleashed the first in a long line of its Amiga machines onto the market, and while the initial Amiga 1000 made a fair technological splash of its own, it was ...
This is part one of a three-part series about the Amiga. The next parts will be published in the next two days. Wow – that was the regular reaction from July 23, 1985 onwards when someone saw an Amiga ...
Data recovery isn’t a lost art, but it can find lost art. Case in point: The Andy Warhol Museum announced on Thursday that it has recovered a series of forgotten doodles, pictures, camera shots, notes ...
Mr. Samir Halabi went to the Palestinian district in 1936JerusalemBorn inFirst Middle East WarIn order to escape from, I took my father and went to the United States. Then I studied art at Cincinnati ...
In the mid 1980s, there was a rash of 16-bit computers entering the market. One of them stood head and shoulders above the rest: Commodore’s Amiga 1000. It had everything that could reasonably be ...