Subj : Re: Jack Tramiel To : Dave Drum From : Andreas Kohlbach Date : Fri Jan 31 2020 01:59 pm On Fri, 31 Jan 2020 12:24:18 +1300, Dave Drum wrote: > > -=> Tristan Miller wrote to Simon Geddes <=- > > > and ambition to do the Vic as a low-cost computer for all. I'm not sure, > > but I feel this was partly motivated by a sense of public purpose. > > TM> I haven't read The Home Computer Wars, but that's not at all the > TM> impression I got of Tramiel from reading Brian Bagnall's "On the Edge: > TM> The Spectacular Rise and Fall of Commodore" (or whatever it happened to > TM> be called at the time -- the author seems to change the title of the > TM> book with every edition). Anyways, from that book it was pretty clear > TM> that Tramiel was driven purely by profit and egotism, not any higher > TM> social purpose. After reading the book (and watching the "Commodore > TM> Story" documentary) I came away with a much less favourable impression > TM> of Tramiel than I had had previously. > > Jack, who dumped CBM in favour of Atari (nee Tramiel Technology Ltd.) > was just as much about money as Irving (Gould) and Medhi (Ali) who came > after him at Commodore and busted it out for fun and (especially) profit. > > ... Amiga made it possible. Commodore made it dead. Wasn't it Commodore offering a cash back of some sort in the early to mid 1980s? You would send in your existing non-Commodore computer and get a discount of some $199 of a price of $249. Some people bought a brand new Timex Sinclair 1000 for $99, sent it to Commodore to receive a Commodore 64. To make some $50. That was a very aggressive marketing strategy by Commodore. I only learned about this reading some 1980s BYTE magazines as PDF which also contained to contemporary advertisements. -- Andreas --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05 * Origin: Agency HUB, Dunedin - New Zealand | Fido<>Usenet Gateway (3:770/3) .