In July 1985, Commodore released an impressive new multimedia PC called the Amiga. This system, once the object of a legal fight between Atari and Commodore, made waves in the press with its ...
Thirty years ago, on July 23, 1985, Commodore took to the stage in New York to reveal the Amiga 1000, a personal computer with unprecedented multimedia capabilities and an intuitive interface that ...
Forget the Apple Macintosh, Ridley Scott, and "1984." As computer launches go, we'll take the Commodore Amiga, Andy Warhol, and Debbie Harry. In January 1984---as the entire Western World is well ...
Previously unknown Andy Warhol artwork, made on a 1985 Commodore Amiga computer, was recently extracted from obsolete floppy disks. The Andy Warhol Museum said in a statement released Thursday that a ...
Nearly three decades after its initial introduction, the Amiga personal computer has been given a makeover with a new design and some of the latest computing technologies. The first Amiga, the Amiga ...
Today the Andy Warhol Museum announced that a collection of never before seen Warhol art had been uncovered from Amiga floppy disks. The artwork was commissioned by Commodore International and used an ...
The Amiga has a lot of fans, and rightly so. The machine broke a lot of ground. However, according to [Dave Farquhar], one of the most popular models today — the Amiga 600 — was reviled in 1992 by ...
My first love was a black wedge. It was 1982, and I had saved up to buy a Sinclair ZX81. That little computer remains the only one of the huge number that I have owned over the years about which I can ...
The Amiga 1000, a computer released by Commodore in the mid-1980s, became legendary for its power compared to other machines available at the time. The Amiga developed a cult following of users, some ...
The floppy disk may be extinct today, but it was cutting-edge technology when Andy Warhol used it to store a number of digital artworks and doodles created on his Commodore Amiga home computer in the ...