Looking for a Commodore C16...
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- Vic 20 Newbie
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Looking for a Commodore C16...
...to complete my collection. If anyone has one they are willing to part with, let me know! I've been watching Ebay, but they are few and far between.
Well I'm in the US, so I need a NTSC model!
Well I'm in the US, so I need a NTSC model!
Last edited by Corsair24x2 on Sat Jan 21, 2012 7:27 pm, edited 1 time in total.
-= Corsair24x2 - In 8-Bit Mode! =-
- eslapion
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Re: Looking for a Commodore C16...
Since you're not telling either in your post on in your profile where you are located, its impossible to tell wether you want an NTSC or PAL model.Corsair24x2 wrote:...to complete my collection. If anyone has one they are willing to part with, let me know! I've been watching Ebay, but they are few and far between.
Be normal.
Always destined to fail though. It was too little too late to tackle the spectrum market. Should have been at least 48K to even stand a chance.tokra wrote:I would be more interested in a C116 (with the rubber keys), since this was the original concept of the machine ($49 computer to compete with the Sinclair Spectrum). There is a nice talk of Bil Herd on c128.com explaining this in detail.
Probably true. We'll never know. Commodore screwed it up themselves with the Plus/4 and C16 and the higher price point. Trying to break into an existing market with a similar product is always going to be especially difficult. In later years the C16-series got quite a following in Eastern Europe if I understand correctly. Also when Commodore were selling of their old stock of the Plus/4 in Germany through Aldi (food discounter) for a VERY low price they ended up having to scrap together more, because demand was so high. Which - too late - proved Tramiel's point of the 264-series.16KVIC20 wrote:Always destined to fail though. It was too little too late to tackle the spectrum market. Should have been at least 48K to even stand a chance.tokra wrote:C116 ($49 computer to compete with the Sinclair Spectrum).
This is interesting to know..tokra wrote:Also when Commodore were selling of their old stock of the Plus/4 in Germany through Aldi (food discounter) for a VERY low price they ended up having to scrap together more, because demand was so high. Which - too late - proved Tramiel's point of the 264-series.
Cheers,
Oge
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Loved the C16 almost as much as VIC 20 ... certainly more than C64.
And the C128 was in a different class altogether (at the time). I've got both C16 and Plus/4 now ... I really need to write something significant for C16. I only did applications with it back in late 1984 / early 1985, but then got C128 as soon as it was available in June 1985, because I had a paying computer programmer's job at the time and could afford one.
And the C128 was in a different class altogether (at the time). I've got both C16 and Plus/4 now ... I really need to write something significant for C16. I only did applications with it back in late 1984 / early 1985, but then got C128 as soon as it was available in June 1985, because I had a paying computer programmer's job at the time and could afford one.
Any technology distinguishable from magic is insufficiently advanced.
https://robert.hurst-ri.us/rob/retrocomputing
https://robert.hurst-ri.us/rob/retrocomputing
Just for your information, I'm working on a port for the C264 series of my CBM-FileBrowser program.rhurst wrote:I really need to write something significant for C16.
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