ICD Inc.
ICD really never was in the forfront of the minds of the Amiga community but it made some of the most technologically advanced gadget for the Amiga. It was one of the first to use FPGAs in its product line, and it had a level of miniturization that was only common to laptops at the time, plus it had some innovative approaches (like with the AdSpeed, with its dual 16k data/instruction static RAM caches which made that device produce benchmarks that rivaled a 68020.)
We also extended the A500 internally like no one else, internal IDE laptop hard drives, internal A500 FLicker fixer, accelerator products, and RAM expansions, not to mention the Trifecta 500 (combo SCSI-2/IDE for the 500...that thing got a great review in Amiga Format)
However, ICD death had nothing to do with the Amiga's death, nope, they got into money troubles of their own making, could not pay suppliers, could not meet distributor shipments, and ultimately the 2-man partnership dissolved , and everyone got laid off. THis was a bit of an uglier than normal time because we all found out later on (like about 3 months after the layoff) that ICD had not been paying our health insurance premiums, even though they had been witholding for them. We found out because our HMO sent us all letters to that effect.
ICD was a pretty big company (medium sized) personell-wise...we actually produced our product on site (including the soldering and PCB dip-tank, we ran 2-production shifts at the height of operation, along with shipping, packaging and all QA/repair, and we had a German sales office. We had a lil over 100 people all told at the height.
I used to man our trade-show booth at World of Commodore, got to travel a lot, meet a lot of people, and work with a lot of the big AMiga names, and got to meet some fo the folks of Amiga legend (like meeting Jay Miner, Jim Sachs, Leo Schwab (complete with cape and hat), Fred Fish, and Harv Laser of Portal fame, Marc Brown of .Info, and of course Kiki Stockhammer LOL
Not to metntion getting to meet some cool people from the other Amiga developers out there (like from CSA, and GVP).
ICD had some cool products waiting in the wings at the time of its demise. We had the Viper 1230 which we showed for the first time at World of Commodore NYC, it was a '030 acellerator for the A1200, and we had a big ol AMiga-chipset based project where we develop what amounted to a 'Amiga Blade Server and enclosure' complete with Ethernet connections and a shared SCSI HDD cluster. This was a prototype of a system we developed to stream movies on a pay-per-view basis in Hotels based on the Amiga classic shipset.
Some of you may recall the demo ICD used to show at tradeshows, the 3 minute clip of 'Star Wars' that could be controlled with a joystick. (we used that demo to show how fast the transfer rates were on our SCSI products...pretty cool we could play full motion, NTSC res HAM video on a A2000 with a mere 68k processor.
Later on when I worked for ASDG, I found Commodore had stiffed ICD too, but in a different way. We hired a VP of sales that was formerly on the CDTV team at Commodore, and we were talking about the good ol days, and he revelaed where Commodore got the hints (if not the actual design) for their IDE controllers in the A600/A1200. See ICD had given loaners of the AdIDE and AdSpeed/IDE to the CDTV team ostensibly for evaluation and potential licensing of or design for use in future CDTV revisions. I found out from this fella that instead COmmodore used the AdIDE as a roadmap for their implementation of the A600's IDE controller. (since their own controllers were huge and clunky).
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Long story short, at times Commdore was an AWFUL partner, and they never gave warning to the official developers about new models. The A500 Plus came as a total suprise, as did the A600 (and we could not even get them from Commodore..we had to press our European distrubutors to get the machines so we could develop for them).
Which was sad considering Commdore used to be good about providing protoype units to developers (we had a prototype A3000 that was mounted to a peice of plywood shipped to us way back when, and they got us a prototype A4000 even, but they they still flung suprises at us like that, knowing full well how much we had invested in the European markets.