MEDPI, Monaco, June 1st 2007: Commodore Gaming today unveils further details regarding its retail presence in the UK, France and Germany. From July 1st Commodore fans and gamers will finally be able ...
Jack Tramiel (right) with Apple's Steve Wozniak in December 2007, prepping for a panel at the Computer History Museum in Mountain View, California.HARRY MCCRACKEN / TIME.COM The PC industry is so ...
I still remember using and playing games on the Commodore 64, but I never thought I'd see the day when the old-school PC was running generative AI to generate creative retro sprites. Check it out: ...
WASHINGTON – The company that owns the famed Commodore computer brand has been sold to Yeahronimo Media Ventures Inc., a Beverly Hills, California, digital music distributor. Tulip Computers NV, based ...
YAMHILL, Ore.--There is a story behind every electronic gadget sold on the QVC shopping channel. This one leads to a ramshackle farmhouse in rural Oregon, which is the home and circuit design lab of ...
Tech nostalgia runs strong among Gen Z. The retro movement has made long-outdated devices desirable once more. When it comes to personal computer nostalgia, you’d be hard-pressed to find a PC more ...
One of the most successful home computer systems of all time was the Commodore 64. While the Apple II broadly targeted businesses, homes, and schools, the Commodore 64 aimed itself perfectly at home ...
Commodore Gaming has signed a one month exclusivity deal with leading e-tailer play.com allowing the firm to sell its much publicised CommodoreG computer one month before anyone else. The new PC, ...
One upon a time, the Commodore name was synonymous with PCs that fit snugly into a (bulky) keyboard. And if one guy has anything to say about it, the Commodore name will rise again. Commodore USA is a ...
If you’re something of a computer nerd like I am, chances are you’ve heard of the Commodore 64. It’d be hard not to, given it’s one of the most important computers in history, as well as the ...
Personal computers started to become a normal household item by the 1980s, with companies like Apple, Atari, IBM, and others fighting for the top spot.
An Apple II PC being sold by Commodore International in 1982? It came very close to happening, but luckily for Apple, Commodore rejected the idea, instead going with its revolutionary Commodore 64.