ArticleCoop.com homepage.
Follow Us On Twitter
Translate Page To Irish Translate Page To German Translate Page To Spanish Translate Page To French
Translate Page To Italian Translate Page To Japanese Translate Page To Korean Translate Page To Portugese Translate Page To Chinese
  Number Of Times Read: 34      
Categories

Accessories (1678)
Advice (2174)
Aging (363)
Arts (10183)
Arts and Crafts (987)
Automotive (8080)
Break-up (248)
Business (82723)
Business Management (1447)
Cancer Survival (400)
Career (511)
Cars and Trucks (5534)
CGI (7)
Cheating (259)
Coding Sites (185)
Computers (18889)
Computers and Technology (9292)
Cooking (2350)
Crafts (748)
Culture (280)
Current Affairs (1080)
Databases (79)
Death (60)
Education (12186)
Entertainment (14643)
Etiquette (21)
Family Concerns (2442)
Film (89)
Finances (30012)
Food and Drinks (5697)
Gardening (2548)
Healthy Living (44390)
Holidays (1016)
Home (15010)
Home Management (1925)
Internet (43932)
Jobs (1172)
Leadership (108)
Legal (1390)
Medical (2163)
Medical Business (196)
Medicines and Remedies (2018)
Men Only (3149)
Motorcyles (167)
Opinions (48)
Our Pets (5178)
Outdoors (1850)
Parenting (1033)
Pets (597)
Recreation (1239)
Relationships (12012)
Religion (2142)
Science (396)
Self Help (1174)
Self Improvement (4902)
Society (922)
Sports (9722)
Staying Fit (13131)
Technology (8102)
Travel (11120)
Web Design (2106)
Weddings (1250)
Wellness, Fitness and Di (5750)
Women Only (8261)
Womens Interest (1465)
World Affairs (47)
Writing (2296)
 
Stats
Total Articles: 33
Total Authors: 103724
Total Downloads: 6552117


Newest Member
Georgiana Serrano

 


   

Rise and Fall of the Commodore 64



[Valid RSS feed]  Category Rss Feed - http://www.articlecoop.com/rss.php?rss=32

[Valid RSS feed]  Paul Wise's Author Feed - http://www.articlecoop.com/author-rss-feed.php?rss=263
By : Paul Wise    29 or more times read
Submitted 2010-08-04 13:37:04

In the annals of computer technology, the case of Commodore International, Incorporated is a most curious case. On the corporate side, there was a lot of strange and even ridiculous melodrama that ultimately lead to the company's downfall. Technology-wise though, Commodore computers were long-time market leaders that beat every rival in popularity, and have left an indelible imprint on the industry, recognizable even today.

The '80s were the Decade of Commodore, what with its best-selling C-64 culminating in the advanced Amiga series. However, corporate mismanagement so crippled the company that despite its leadership status in the industry within a few more years it was being chopped up and sold to pay off creditors. For most people coming of age during the 1980s, the C-64 was their introduction to the world of computers and information technology. Data was at first stored on cassette tapes, then 5.25-inch floppy disks soon thereafter. By the time of the Amiga 500's debut in 1987, 3.5-inch diskettes were becoming the norm. Thus the technology almost literally grew up with the kids who nowadays still gather in users' groups to remember the machines fondly.

The C-64 was a 17 million-unit bestseller because Commodore hit upon the strategy of selling its products through common consumer retail outlets and not just specialty computer shops. It could also be plugged directly into ordinary television sets without any special hardware or modification. And it had the largest software library of any personal computing system of its time, with well over 10,000 titles available that spanned any variety of application types and genres. Demo software was also first popularized through the C-64, which made home computing mainstream. The system eventually wound up selling 30 million units, making it the best selling personal computer in history, outselling similar machines by IBM, Apple, and Atari - all household names today.

The C-64 was also one of the world's first gaming consoles with the ability to play games on cartridges that were inserted into the machine, much the same as its successors, especially the classic Nintendo Entertainment System. The C-64 was also one of the first systems to allow online gaming - something that is wildly popular today and almost mandatory for big titles. Neverwinter Nights also became the world's first MMORPG - Massive Multiplayer Online Role Playing Game - becoming a very early ancestor of famous titles like World of Warcraft.

The later Amiga series saw a history almost as stellar, though by this time corporate intrigues back at headquarters doomed whatever innovation engineers at Commodore Business Machines, its research and development arm, could cook up. This is why the C-64 and the Amiga 500 continue to inspire to this day, with emulators and software available on platforms as varied as Nintendo's Virtual Console and Apple's App Store.

Author Resource: Written by Paul Wise, who once owned a C-64, recommends BlogsClash.com for more reading on Commodore Internation, Incorporated.
Article From ArticleCoop

Related Articles

HTML Ready Article. Click on the "Copy" button to copy into your clipboard.




Firefox users please select/copy/paste as usual
Rate This Article
Vote to see the results!

Do you like this article?
  • Yes.
  • Not Sure.
  • No.


New Members
select
Sign up
select
Learn More
 
Nav Menu
Home
Login
Submit Articles
Submission Guidelines
Top Articles
Link Directory
About Us
Contact Us
Privacy Policy
RSS Feeds

Actions
Print This Article
Add To Favorites

 
Sponsors

Target Your Competition

Lingerie.com

 


Copyright © 2009 - ArticleCoop.com
All Rights Reserved.

Powered By:Article Friendly