Actually I understood you were talking about the original Commodore, before the 1994 bankruptcy. I was just trying to point out that a "Commodore" company prior to current Commodore USA did indeed market and sell a PC using the name "Commodore 64". The Commodore 64 Web.It was a flop as far as I can tell when it came out in the mid-late 90's,
First lets try to get a common understanding:
With "in the mid-late 90's" you mean the years 1995-1999?
If so, then you see me rather surprised, as Commodore International declared bankruptcy on April 29, 1994.
So I ask:
Did I miss something? How could they "market and sell a PC using the name "Commodore 64"", if they were already roughly one year bankrupt in "the mid 90s" (1995)?
And b.t.w. - today is the first time I hear that Commodore allegedly marketed and sold a PC using the name "Commodore 64" back in the 90s.
The only "Commodore 64" I've heard of in the 80s/90s was
this one - but it wasn't a "PC" (assuming that you're referring to something based on the Intel x86 cpu family with "PC"), it was called "homecomputer" and had a Motorola 6510 cpu - at least here...
A quick research in Wikipedia brought up a chronological list of
all Commodore "of old" computers - but there is no "Commodore 64" listed in the "Commodore PC compatible systems"-section.
but I don't remember the outrage that I am seeing out of some (not pointing fingers) today.
As far as I'm concerned, I'm not outraged - just confused by the "facts" you presented so far...
...
Once I saw progress towards actual product, my stance softened.
...
Where and when did you see "progress towards actual product"?
I haven't seen anything aside from nicely raytraced pictures of how they envisaged their planned products might look like - no prototype, no screenshots - but maybe I missed something.