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- The O1's doing fine
-
- Hi Folks, I just wanted to let you know that my 'rediscovered' O1
- is doing just fine. I recently bought a handle-fan to cut down on any
- potential overheating, and the Tech Manual and Diagnostic Disk so I
- can perform any future repairs if necessary. I would like to thank
- Tom Mcenroe who was kind enough to send me a brief letter via GEnie
- mail, explaining some extra goodies about Osborne computers.
-
- I do get a lot of use from my O1. When I went on vacation last
- Spring, I took it along and wrote an article for PIPMAG. While at
- home, I place the unit on a typing stand next to my C128 and write
- memos to myself. Sometimes I even work on two projects at once. It
- really has proved invaluable!
-
- R.COLEMAN3
-
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
-
- Eight-Bit'ers Unite!
-
- I recently picked up a copy of RUN magazine from my nearby
- newsstand, and was dismayed that this once proud publication is now
- offered only every two months. In the editorial, it claims that this
- digression will only last through the summer, but I have my doubts.
- It contains fifty some-odd pages. I remember when it was close to one
- hundred and fifty. Times have changed.
-
- Let's face it, even the venerable C64 is tuning up for its swan
- song. We can't be surprised, as this is just another link in a
- logical chain of events. When Commodore abandoned the eight-bit
- market by discontinuing the C128, it spelled doom for the C64 too.
- Also, Berksoft's self-proclaimed intentions of entering the Apple and
- DOS markets under the banner of GEOS sealed this fate. Now, most
- software vendors are dropping the C64 from their offerings and pulling
- their advertising accounts as well. It is sad to see the demise of
- the Commodore C-series in spite of a moderate but continued
- popularity. But in the business world, maybe it is imperative to
- 'abandon the few to serve the many'. I predict (with great sadness
- and I hope I'm wrong) that within a year there may be no glossy
- publications for the C64/C128. The dollars and cents just don't make
- it feasible. I can only say that Commodore may have signed its own
- death warrant by pursuing the current trends instead of staying with a
- winner, the cheap home computer. I suggest that Commodore and
- Berksoft will ultimately fail. They left behind a lucrative market, a
- virtual monopoly, and entered the Big Race too late to make any
- significant gains. But I do wish them well. I sincerely do.
-
- Now, more than ever, network services like GEnie, local user
- groups, and publications like Pipmag are the vehicles through which
- eight-bit users can survive in the 90s. Not just Commodore, but all
- CP/M users, and Adam, and Atari, and Apple II, and TI, and Sinclair.
- I say to the disenfranchised of the computing world: "Come join us on
- GEnie. We are here to help each other and console a weary heart! We
- welcome you!"
-
- Name Withheld by Request of Author
-