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 ...
Jonathan Nash was a mysterious, unreasonably talented and incredibly funny man, who influenced generations of writers ...
The Commodore Amiga was a computer gaming system that featured advanced games for its time, with titles that displayed animation, colors, and sound that were often better than the SNES and Sega ...
Howard Geltzer, who helped launch Sony’s Walkman and other breakthrough CE products in the 1980s and 1990s, died January 7 at ...
Several huge releases helped kickstart the trend, such as the Commodore 64, Commodore Amiga, the IBM 5150, and others. Some of those systems sold millions of units and were mainstays in households ...
The pioneering publicist transformed consumer electronics marketing, mentored future leaders and championed education ...
Veterans and technology historians will already be paying attention here: wasn't 1985 also the year of the Amiga? Exactly, and it was not only this ground-breaking computer, also from Commodore ...
Even before being exposed to the Commodore P.E.T. and later the Commodore ... with virtually every major platform from the TRS-80 and Amiga, to today's high end, multi-core servers.
Add articles to your saved list and come back to them any time. Tucked in a familiar but easily overlooked brick building in Melbourne’s inner east, ancient machines hum, tick, chatter, rattle ...