Vic Atari

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Vic Atari

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ATARI COLECO SEGA 3DO VIC20 NINTENDO RF TV/GAME ADAPTER ATARI COLECO SEGA 3DO VIC20 NINTENDO RF TV/GAME ADAPTER Paypal US $7.99 26d 22h 34m
NEW Sealed Aztec Challenge Cassette for Atari or Commodore VIC-20 NEW Sealed Aztec Challenge Cassette for Atari or Commodore VIC-20 Paypal US $59.99 28d 8h 57m
Video Command Rapid Fire Joystick For Atari & VIC Video Command Rapid Fire Joystick For Atari & VIC Paypal US $39.99 27d 15h 50m
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Video Games Joystick Gemstik Tele-Games Commodore Vic-20 Atari Controller Video Games Joystick Gemstik Tele-Games Commodore Vic-20 Atari Controller Paypal US $15.74 23d 14h 21m
Epyx 500XJ Joystick (Commodore Vic 20, C64, Amiga, Atari) Epyx 500XJ Joystick (Commodore Vic 20, C64, Amiga, Atari) Paypal US $29.95 21d 9h 7m
Atari 2600 Gemini Gemstik VG170B Joystick Controller Commodore 64 Vic-20 Atari 2600 Gemini Gemstik VG170B Joystick Controller Commodore 64 Vic-20 Paypal US $29.99 19d 18h 29m
SURESHOT JOYPAD / JOYSTICK - COMMODORE 64 / VIC 20 / SPECTRUM / AMIGA / ATARI SURESHOT JOYPAD / JOYSTICK - COMMODORE 64 / VIC 20 / SPECTRUM / AMIGA / ATARI Paypal US $31.19 13d 3h 57m
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VIC-20 Paddle Controllers for Commodore 64 Atari ST 2600 Boxed VIC-20 Paddle Controllers for Commodore 64 Atari ST 2600 Boxed Paypal US $38.99 11d 21h 46m
ATARI TRAK-BALL CONTROLLER video-game 1983 joystick 2600 in box CX-22 Vic-20 ATARI TRAK-BALL CONTROLLER video-game 1983 joystick 2600 in box CX-22 Vic-20 Paypal US $60.00 10d 21h 25m
WICO Command Control JOYSTICK commodore vic-20 64 128 ATARI very nice tested WICO Command Control JOYSTICK commodore vic-20 64 128 ATARI very nice tested Paypal US $24.00 7d 9h 44m
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Vic Atari

Commodore legacy - Part 1

Although at times I may try to hide it, at times there is unfortunately no escaping the fact that I am what many would consider a 'geek'. The last two weeks have seen me lying on the sofa for an hour at a time reading a fantastic 520 page book entitled 'On The Edge - The Spectacular Rise and Fall of Commodore'.

The majority of you will probably not know that twelve years ago, at the tender age of thirteen, I started producing a fanzine entitled 'Zine 64 which focused on the Commodore 64 computer; a machine released in 1982, just one year after my birth. Although many would consider such a machine long in the tooth when I started writing the fanzine, it had a fantastically hardcore user base who all pulled together to try and prolong its' already long existence. As I write today, there are still people supporting this twenty five year old machine; the passion this machine instils means that, even to this day, it still has a very special place in my heart.

Whilst what I write below may not be to the taste of every reader, I just wanted to take a moment out of looking to the future but instead glance back at the past at one company who arguably changed the world.
Commodore International was started back in 1954 as a typewriter company who due to fierce competition then started producing adding machines in the late 1950s, and then electronic calculators in the 1960s. In the late '70s an engineer working at Commodore named Chuck Peddle convinced the founder Jack Tramiel that calculators were a dead end, and that they should turn their attention to computers.

In 1977 Chuck Peddle packaged an existing microcomputer kit into a metal case along with a QWERTY keyboard, monochrome monitor and tape recorder to create the Commodore PET which was relatively successful in both the UK and US/Canada. Commodores' next major computer release was a colour capable machine, the VIC-20 which sold at the remarkably low price of $299 from its introduction to the market in 1981. The low price of the machine, along with an advertising campaign featuring William Shatner resulted in the VIC-20 being the first computer to ship one million units.

In 1982 the Commodore 64 was released to the world; this was a machine that would be produced until the year 1994 and would ship approximately seventeen million units making it the best selling computer of all time. The Commodore 64 was an impressive bit of kit; the combination of high specification and low price lead to the famous Commodore advertising slogan of 'You can't buy a better computer at twice the price'.

In 1983 Commodore cut the price of both the VIC-20 and C64 which drove one of their main competitors, Texas Instruments out of the computer market, almost destroyed Atari and bankrupted many of their smaller rivals. Whilst this price war was bad for Commodores' savings, not to mention the profits of its competitors, it did mean that affordable computing was finally within reach of the general public.

The specifications of the C64 seem almost laughable nowadays; a 1 Mhz processor and 64k of memory however the machine packed in many features not present in computers of the time. The C64 for example supported 16 colours when many were still monochrome, additionally it has a dedicated sound chip capable of playing three synthesised voices simultaneously when most machines simply utilised a buzzer. Such technical advices that Commodore had made in the field of home computing were relatively modest compared with what was to come.

It was my original intention to squeeze all of this in to one article I've only just scratched the surface of the impact that Commodore had on the market so this feature will conclude next week.

About the Author

Chris Holgate writes a weekly article of all things tech related. He is a director and copyrighter of the online computer consumables business Refresh Cartridges who sell cheap ink cartridges, toner cartridges, computer hardware and other computer consumables online. An archive of his work can be found at www.computerarticles.co.uk.
www.computerarticles.co.uk

name of an old coleco or atari game?

I am looking for the name of this old game played on either Coleco, Vic 20 or Atari, can't really remember as we had all 3. Definatly early 80's though. The game was this guy ( I think he was a robber) who would have to go to one end of the screen to the other and he had 3 blocks to protect him from falling something, debris or rain? He had to get money bags from one side the other. The higher you would get in rank or screens the faster the blocks protecting him would dissapear. I have not played this in over 20 years to excuse my fuzzy description :)

i have a old atari but i never looked at the games once i get the name of da games ill hit u back on if i have it of not ok?

Gamer Memories: Life, (Near) Death, and Games
One editor nearly finds his own "game over" screen, but games bring him back.

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