Commodore VC20 Volks Computer

Autopsy:

Description:

  • Country: USA
  • Most Common: Germany
  • Rarity: Rare
  • Year: 1981

from Wikipedia:

The VIC-20 (Germany: VC-20; Japan: VIC-1001) is an 8-bit home computer which was sold by Commodore Business Machines. The VIC-20 was announced in 1980,[1] roughly three years after Commodore’s first personal computer, the PET. The VIC-20 was the first microcomputer to sell one million units.

The VIC-20 was intended to be more economical than the PET computer. It was equipped with only 5 KB of RAM (of this, only 3583 Bytes was available to the user) and used the same MOS 6502 CPU as the PET. The VIC-20′s video chip, the MOS Technology VIC, was a general-purpose color video chip designed by Al Charpentier in 1977 and intended for use in inexpensive display terminals and game consoles, but Commodore couldn’t find a market for the chip. As the Apple II gained momentum with the advent of VisiCalc in 1979, Jack Tramiel wanted a product that would compete in the same segment, to be presented at the January 1980 CES. For this reason Chuck Peddle and Bill Seiler started to design a computer named TOI (The Other Intellect).

source: wikipedia

  1. gabriel aaron nolfo
    April 22nd, 2009 at 21:14 | #1

    FORMIDABILE!!!Sai tutta la storia e ho visto che ai rimesso il tasto num 9.Sono felice per te!

  2. April 22nd, 2009 at 22:43 | #2

    ehehehehehehe ;-D il tasto numero 9 ..e’ la prima cosa che ho fatto… subito dopo lo ripulito… pero’ era tenuto cosi’ bene ..che non ho fatto molta fatica ;-D

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