The Commodore Amiga was famous for its characteristic Say voice, with its robotic enunciation being somewhat emblematic of the 16-bit era. The Commodore VIC-20 had no such capability out of the box, ...
Anyone remember the Commodore Vic-20? The Commodore VIC-20 was an 8-bit home computer that was available back in 1980. It ran software from a cassette tape and had 5KB of RAM and a 1MHz processor.
Commodore Business Machines (CBM) had been in business long before handheld electronic calculators had been invented, let alone "personal computers." Computing machines took up whole rooms in ...
Whether you're a lover of all things retro or are simply someone who lived through the 1980s and wants to rekindle a little techy nostalgia, seeing the Commodore VIC-20 should send shivers down your ...
Just before Christmas, Commodore teased us with an Intel Atom-based Commodore 64 -- a regular all-in-one Ubuntu PC in the shape of the classic C64 home computer, which could also boot into a ...
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Rik is Pocket-lint's senior news editor and has been a tech and games journalist since the 80s. He has seen and covered just about every console, mobile phone, gadget and home cinema device launched ...
In a recent episode of [The Retro Shack], a new Commodore VIC-20 is built, using a ‘Vicky Twenty’ replacement PCB by [Bob’s Bits] as the base and as many new components as could be found. The occasion ...