The 8721 PLA, or programmable logic array, was one of the chips that had to be invented to make the Commodore 128, the last of the 8-bit computers that formed the leading edge of the early PC ...
Commodore C-128, the last mass production 8 bit computer and first home computer with 40 and 80 column displays, dual processors, three operating systems, 128k memory via MMU and one heck of a ...
The Commodore 128 was a direct follow-up to C64 that only ever sold a few million units versus the C64's mighty estimated peak of 17 million units. By the time Commodore 128 launched, it was the ...
the then home computer king Commodore announced the Commodore 128 at the “Winter CES 1985”. In the biggest boom in the computer industry up to that time, innovations were so prolific that two ...
Four decades ago at CES 1985, the Commodore 128 debuted. It sold just a few million units compared to 17 million for the Commodore 64 — the era of 8 ...
Before eventually becoming available for other systems, Quantum Computer Services began offering its Quantum Link software to owners of the Commodore 64 and 128 PCs in November 1985. Q-Link was ...
Commodore also had development departments in ... C128 and CP/M didn't change anything: GEOS 128. The graphical user interface looked like Apple's Macintosh, which had been introduced a year ...