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Author Topic: Amiga and retail chains  (Read 5963 times)

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Offline bloodline

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Re: Amiga and retail chains
« on: May 03, 2008, 02:56:16 PM »
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persia wrote:
Well if CBM would have spent some of the money on R&D rather than an extra long grill, maybe the would have gotten somewhere.

CBM could never have survived the competition, even if they could have seen the future.  Actually there was, invest all their money in Yahoo, Apple and Microsoft stock...



I will maintain that if Commodore had sold an ISA Multimedia board with the Amiga GFX and Audio on it, back in the late 1980s, they would now be a massive player in the GFX market... something like NVidia are now...



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Re: Amiga and retail chains
« Reply #1 on: May 03, 2008, 03:18:59 PM »
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coldfish wrote:
Yeah, AGA took the world by storm...


I assume that was directed to me...

I am suggesting that in 1987, when the A2K and the A500 were released. If Commodore had also put out a Multimedia ISA board, that would have been a great way to start a PC standard multimedia platform... in 87, most peolle would still have wanted an A500 for games... but if the PC world had access to identical spec gfx/audio as the Amiga... game developers would have had an easy time porting games over from the Amiga and the ST... so they would support it... thus if the market that the A500 and the ST were aimed at ever went titz up... Commodore would still have had a revenue stream...

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Re: Amiga and retail chains
« Reply #2 on: May 03, 2008, 04:09:55 PM »
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Psy wrote:
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bloodline wrote:
Quote

coldfish wrote:
Yeah, AGA took the world by storm...


I assume that was directed to me...

I am suggesting that in 1987, when the A2K and the A500 were released. If Commodore had also put out a Multimedia ISA board, that would have been a great way to start a PC standard multimedia platform... in 87, most peolle would still have wanted an A500 for games... but if the PC world had access to identical spec gfx/audio as the Amiga... game developers would have had an easy time porting games over from the Amiga and the ST... so they would support it... thus if the market that the A500 and the ST were aimed at ever went titz up... Commodore would still have had a revenue stream...


It would have been better if Commodore pushed the Amiga 500 and later Amiga 1200 as hard as Sega pushed the Sega Genesis.  Get the Amiga 500 and later Amiga 1200 in as many store shelves and get better system box designs so they catch the eye on store shelfs.

If it worked then developers would have supported the Amiga simply because of the user base.


Advertising alone would have been difficult I think... Marketing the Amiga was always a problem...I wasn't a game console, but it fitted into that market... it wasn't a Business computer, but it fitted into that market... it was basically a home computer, much like the AppleII or the C64 or the Sinclair Spectrum... but it was better than those machines, but incompatible with their software bases... and was more expensive...

From Geek perspective the Amiga is a dream come true... but to the average joe... in the late 80s computer were specialist items... purchased for a specific purpose... The Amiga didn't really make sense to the public at large... The computer revolution really took off in 1995... The Amiga could have sparked that off much earlier, but Commodore didn't have the marketing knowhow/vision.

But what it did have was some great technology, and it could have licensed that to third party... Didn't Sun try and license the tech, but were refused? I rest my case...