I agree that the A2000 was priced too high for too long. I love the A2000, but it *is* essentially just an A500 with slots, a big box and a beefier power supply. Image and perception are everything though - the A2000 was a BEAST! In America, BIGGER is BETTER don'tcha know? lol
I remember shaking my head at the price of a barebones A2000 system in the late 80's and up until the early 90's when some retailers still had them for sale and outfitting them with 2091's, OS2.1, etc. They were never really deeply discounted, at least - to my knowledge - for a particular computer such as the A2000 to last 'that' long and continue to be a viable machine years later, amidst all the changes in computing, is nothing short of astounding. The damn thing literally grew with the computer user and the upgrade options were nearly endless. The A2000 was obviously a hugely successful concept for C=, especially from a gross margin point of view and around the time one would have thought they were starting to discontinue the model, you know they weren't going to be unloading 'em cheap for the Video Toaster and other speciality users at the time. From a business standpoint, I guess I would have done the same thing. At the end of the day, you can't really fault Commodore too badly here. IF you subscribe to the doctrine of not fixing that which is not broken that is. lol