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- From: mjf@clark.net (Marc Fraioli)
- Newsgroups: comp.sys.cbm,comp.sys.amiga.advocacy
- Subject: A eulogy for Commodore
- Date: 1 May 1994 17:06:57 GMT
- Organization: Fraioli's Linux Hacking and Chowder Society
- Lines: 42
- Distribution: world
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-
- Let me start off by saying that I pretty much abandoned Commodore 3 years
- ago, so I guess this is in some small way partly my fault. Not that I
- feel guilty really, but I thought I'd get that out in the open right from
- the start.
-
- The first computer I ever owned was a VIC-20. I was in 8th grade at the
- time, and saved my money to buy it. Bought a B&W TV from a friend for $35
- to use as a display. Eventually got a datasette, and finally a 1541. It's
- amazing how excited I was about being able to store 170k on a floppy, and
- how *fast* I thought that thing was. Bought a C= 801 printer too. I even
- got Commodore's 16k RAM expansion, giving me 21k total. I was in heaven.
- Imagine how I felt when I retired the VIC, and got a C64. Got a Seikosha
- dot matrix printer, where the lower-case letters like 'g' and 'y' actually
- dipped below the line they were on, instead of sticking up and looking ugly
- like on that old 801. Finally, I even got the C128, with a 1571 disk drive
- (double sided! wow!) and a genuine color monitor, with an 80-column text
- display.
-
- I learned a lot about how computers work from those old things. They
- were hacker's machines-- you were encouraged to poke around (or should I
- say POKE around?). The number 49152 is permanently etched in my brain,
- even though I haven't used it in years now. How many people ever tried
- to cram a simple 6502 assembly routine into the cassette buffer on a C64?
- Ah, those were the days. Ok, so nostalgia isn't a big thing in the world
- of computers, but the end of Commodore triggered something in me.
-
- In 1991, I was tired of my 128. I was out of college, working for a living
- with bigger, more powerful computers, and it felt too limiting. I looked
- at the Amiga. Looked long and hard. Fantasized about the SVR4 Unix-based
- Amiga. But in the end, it was just too expensive, compared to a generic
- 486 out of the back of Computer Shopper. Learned DOS (took about a week),
- and Windows. Decided they sucked. Moved on to OS/2, Linux. I hadn't
- thought much about Commodore in a while. And now they're gone. Am I just
- being silly here? I don't know.
-
- You know, I still have all those old machines, even the VIC...
-
- ---
- Marc Fraioli | "They couldn't hit an elephant at this dist- "
- mjf@clark.net | - Last words of Union General John Sedgwick,
- | Battle of Spotsylvania Court House, U.S. Civil War
-
-