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The Commodore 64 was one of the most popular PCs of all time, selling close to 17 million units between 1982 and 1994. The following slideshow is from PCWorld’s 2008 archives.
The last original Commodore 64 keyboard computer was sold in 1994, and since then, the Commodore brand and assets have been owned by various companies ...
LOS ANGELES – Commodore 64, the hottest-selling personal computer in the 1980s, is back – with the same bulky breadbox look but updated with the latest technology. Appealing to nostalgic ...
The keys look like a piece of clay that you pushed a marble into — so it fits your fingertip.” Advertisement The price for the new Commodore 64 basic model is even the same as it was for a ...
The most disappointing thing about the miniature Commodore 64 released last year was that its tiny keyboard didn’t actually work—it was just for show.
Like the Commodore 64, the C64 keyboard has limited keys, foregoing a number pad. The column of F-keys on the right side of the retro computer is abandoned in favor of today's standard navigation ...
It was limited to 64 kilobytes of memory — about the equivalent of one long email. Commodore sold more than 17 million of its C64 systems, according to the manufacturer Commodore International.
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