Commodore 64, 1982 - Computer History Museum
Transcription
Commodore 64, 1982 - Computer History Museum
"THE COMMODORE64 COULD BETHEMICROCOMPUTER INDUSTRY'S OUTSTANDING NEW PRODUCT INTRODUCTION SINCETHE BIRTH OFTHIS INDUSTRY."-SHEARSON/AMERICAN EXPRESS ,,,,,, ,,,,,,,, FOR$595.YOU GET WHAT NOBODYELSECANF- =:YOU FORTWICETHE. Even at twice the price, you won't find the power of a Commodore 6 4 in any personal computer: The Commodore 64 has a built-in memory of 64K. That fact alone would have sent computer critics .... I I IN and analysts such as Shearson/American Express t o the typewriter for the kind of praise you read on the cover. But there's more. As a quick read here will tell you. THE &,QUITE SIMPL!HAS NOCOMPETITION. AS A QUICK LOOK ATOUR COMPETITION WIUTEUYOU. Features - - - -- Base Price* " ,, - * 1 - - - Advanced Personal Computer Features Built-in User Memory ,, , , .. L ' Proarammable ~ e a T ~ ~ p e w r iKeyboard ter Graphics Characters (from Keyboard) Upper and Lower Case Letters 5%" Disk Ca~acitvPer Drive Audio Features Sound Generator Music Synthesizer. Hi-Fi Output . ' .. Video Features TV Output .. .. II I I - I .- , 11. " Input/Output Features "Smart" Peripherals - APPLE II+@ $1530 :"+I 11 1 I Software Features 5 CP/M" Option (Over 1,000 packag;$j" - rn Yes Extra 1 r n i 1 1 -L- - 1?E7 yes" - 16K 48K Yes Yes Yes (65 keys) Yes (61keys No Yes Yes Yes 178K 96K i No -IIIIC )I..- :- YE 1 1 No Yes 800" $1565 16K Yes Yes (52keys) Yes (83 keys) No No Upper Only Yes 143K 160K Yes No No ATA R l TANDY TRS-808 Ili Yes Yes Yes Yes z::=;-rJ - !:;=' I Yes .wT-,-,~ Yes - IBMa 4 8K Yes " ' Game Machine Features Cartr~dgeGame Slot Game Controllers - I 6 4K Yes Yes ( 6 6 keys) Yes Yes 170K , I . COMMODORE 64 $595 Y5c Extra I NO I --v--- - ,r -- No Yes No I NO I- -0 x.1:= Yes Yes 'Manufacturer's Suggested Retail P r ~ c eJuly1 1982 Disk drives and printersare not included in prices The 64's price may change without notice And. after they get a look at this chart, you can count on the cornpetitlon t o change their prices Yes yes - ii i ~ - I ;: 1 NO ' Yes Yes WITH A COMPUTERTHAT'S LIGHTYEARSAHEAD OF ITS COMPETITION, WE THOUGHT ITAPPROPRIATE THAT ITS SOFTWARE SHOULD BEAT LEASTA FEW YEARSAHEAD. Here's h o w we did it. PART I.THE FIRST ORDERLY APPROACH TO SOFTWARE. Commodore's programmers examined the whole jungle of software available today-literally hundreds of programs-and isolated the most popular and most useful. Then they made them better. The result: a varietv of highly refined, perfected programs for home, business and education. PART II. A N ALMOST INFINITE ARRAY OF SOFTWARE. Independent makers of software have alreariv h n n n ~ dn n thn fin hgnrl- the world's most ~ o ~ u l Droarams ar t o the 64. Further, the 64'is compsible with CP/M? Which means a simple optional add-on opens u p over 2,000 additional useful programs. Plus-and a big plus this is for educators-you can also have access t o programs developed for the Commodore PET? as it uses the same BASIC language as the Commodore 64. Software Features yes Game Mach~neFeatures Cartr~dgeGame Slot Game Controllers I Yes Yes -= - -- IL ! No- - - i Yes Z , - No Yes 'Manufacturer'sSuggested Retall Price July 1.1982 Dskdr~vesandpr~ntersarenot lncluded In prlces The 64's prlce may change w~thoutnotlce And, after they get a look at t h ~ schart, you can count on the competltlon to change +r Yes No No Yes Yes prices II WITH A COMPUTERTHAT'S LIGHTYEARS AHEAD OF ITS COMPETITION, WE THOUGHT ITAPPROPRIATE THAT ITS SOFTWARE SHOULD BEAT LEASTA FEW YEARS AHEAD. Here's how we did it. PART I.THE FIRST ORDERLY APPROACH TO SOFTWARE. ~ o m m o d o r e ' s ~ r o ~ r a m m examined ers the whole jungle of software ava~labletoday-l~terally hundreds of programs-and isolated the most popular and most useful. Then they made them better. The result: a variety of highly refined; perfected programs for home, business and education. PART II. AN ALMOST INFINITE ARRAY OF SOFTWARE. Independent makers of software I ~ Yme ~ ~s c r e e n have already hopped on the 6 4 band- I*: C ~ wSe eP an6 :t;:~sed:;:l:::$*::;~;::s**$r*:. wagon. They've come to Commodore r Zhansrs for training on the 6 4 and are adapting I on xs *Q the world's most popular programs to the 64. Further, the 6 4 is compatible with CP/M! Which means a simple optional add-on opens up over 2,000 additional useful programs. Plus-and a big plus this is for educators-you can also have access to programs developed for the Commodore PET? as it uses the same BASIC language as the Commodore 6 4 . the ~ O P * It X L I I be printed F151V edrf document w x T h e U f prlnTrnp the DATA BASE \ WHY DIDTHE 64 COME FROMCOMMODOREAND NOT SOMEBODY ELSE? BECAUSEWE MAKEOUR OWN CHIPS. Commodore is one of the few companies that design and manufacture their own chips. So, unlike other computer companies that have to buy their chips, when Commodore wants to alter CP/M@ is a registered trademark of D~g~tal Research. Inc Opt~onal280 microprocessor require6 a design or create a new one, their designers and OH, BY THE WAXTHE 64 JUST SO HAPPENS TO BE THE MOST BRILLIANTGAME MACHINEYOU CAN BUY. ACEOF ACES With the 64, not only will you have an amazing array of terrific games (just a few are pictured here), but what's really amazing is how you'll see them. With a variety of colors that's never been offered before, with a full range of sound, and with a resolution that truly rivals arcades. Since the 6 4 is a true computer, you can actually invent your own sophisticated (or unsophisticated) games. WHAT DOESTHE COMMODORE64 DO?WHAT DOYOUWANT IT TO DO? Whether you're in business and want a personal computer for spreadsheet calculation or word and text processing or mailing lists or data storage and retrieval.. . . Or whether you're a musician looking for a music synthesizer (or a beginner who wants to learn how to play one).. . . The 64, quite simply, can do almost anything you want it to. And all with graphics that have an incredible resolution. FOR ABOUT $100EXTRAJHECOMMODORE64 CANGET INFORMATIONAND PROGRAMSFROMMULTI-MILLIONDOLLARCOMPUTERS. A modem IS a device that connects your computer ro your phone. Telecom~utina,they call it.They used to also call it expensive. A personal computer and modem would go for at least $1,500 and be judged "reasonablel' What happens when, for less than .:. - - . Or whether you're a musi I G L l leb'w-. FOR ABOUT $100EXTRAJHE COMMODORE64 CANGET INFORMATIONAND PROGRAMSFROMMULTIMILLIONDOLLARCOMPUTERS. A modem is a device that connects your computer to your phone. Telecomputing, they call it.They used to also call it expensive. A personal computer and modem would go for at least $1,500 and be judged "reasonablel' What harmens when. for less than COMMODORE64 SYSTEMS SPECIFICATIONS SYSTEM UNIT Microprocessor: 6510, designed and produced by Commodore's M O S T s i o n . Uses the same lnstructron set as the 6502, but has addit~onal~ n ~ u t / o u t a Imes. ut K user-accessible for BASIC programs; Memory:,64K of R A M . ~ ~are 52K f o r c h l n e Ian uage programs. contain the operating system and Commodore 20K of internal BASIC lanauaae. K e y b G r d i Full-s~zetypewr~terstyle. 6 6 keys, upper and lower case. FourTnasslgned pro rammable funct~onkeys. Color and the f j l set of 6 4 PET graph~cs can be selected drectlv - . from keyboard. Display: 4 0 columns by 2 5 lines, 2 5 5 combinations of border/ background colors. 16 text colors and use of all 6 4 PETgraphrc characters. High-resolution graphics mode, of 3 2 0 x 2 0 0 pixels for exceptional detail and clarity In ames or animat~on.Can use 16 colors s~multaneously. 8 independent? movable Sprites can be created for games and animation Each is $1 x 2 4 pixels, and may contain up t o three colors, Sound: 6 5 8 1 Sound lnterface Device provldes music and sound to r ~ v aeven l some ded~catedmuslc synthes~zers. Produces three independent, voices, each with a range of,nine octaves. Four waveforms are avadable: sawtooth, triangle, varlable pulse and noise. Includes programmable ADSR (attack! decay, sustain, release) generator. Programmable fllter can be ~ n d ~ v ~ d u aselected lly for each voice; provides low-pass, h~gh-pass,band-pass or notch outputs. Varlable resonance and master volume control. COMMUNICATIONS The Commodore 6 4 accepts a low-cost VICMODEMTMthrough its ei h t bit user port, glvlng ~taccess t o other computers over ordlnary te?eohone lines. The modem allows users to gain access t o lar e data bases, such as The Source. CompuServe and D o w Jones ~ews/aetrievalServ~ce. PERIPHERALS The Commodore 6 4 will support: WOM Datassette Recorder. A low-cost tape u n ~w t h ~ c hallows the storage of prggramsand data on standard a u d ~ otape cassettes S~ngle-DiskUnit: Uses standard 5%-inch flop y diskettes to store programs and data. Each diskette holds up t o 1 7 8 0 0 0 characters of information. D ~ s kunlts include their o w n microprocessors and memory systems, and therefore don't requlre memory resources from the Commodore 6 4 maln u n ~ tThe . Commodore 6 4 will support up t o five single-disk units. Printer: The VIC 1515 printer attaches directly t o the Commodore 6 4 withoutaddit~onalInterfaces. Prlnts 3 0 characters per second, dot-matrlx. Uses plain tractor-fed paper. lnterface Cartridges: Spec~alizedcartridges allow the Commodore 6 4 to use varlous standard dev~ces,including printers, controllers and modems. PET Emulator; Allows users t o run most of the programs designed for PET systems w ~ t hl~ttleor no m o d ~ f ~ c a t ~ o n . Audio and Video C o n n e c t i o ~Djrect outputs from the Commodore 6 4 connect audlo s~gnalst o hlgh-quahty stereo systems, and v ~ d e o sianals to a monitor. Cartridge Slot: W ~ laccept l ames and other appl~cat~ons des~gned for C E d a or Max ~ a c k n e ' on plug-n cartr~dges. Other Interfaces prov~deaccess for two joysticks, four game paddles or a I~ghtpen. - SOFTWARE Commodore has already created a variety of programs in several categories for the 6 4 and has plans for much, much more. Bus~ness, the personal, entertainment and educational a ~ ~ l i c a t i o nmake s Commodore 6 4 an enormously useful and versat~letool A 2 8 0 mlcroprocessor on a plug-~ncartr~dgemakes an enormous amount of software ava~lableto users of the 6 4 system By plugg~ngthe opt~onalmlcroprocessor Into the 64's 8 - b ~user t port, the user enables the Commodore t o run programs wrltten In CP/Mm CP/M@ IS a reg~steredtrademark of Digital Research Inc Prellmlnarv release miormatton Spec~f~cat~ons subject to change a- - --- prov~deslow-G%, high-pass, band-pass or notch outputs Var~ableresonance and master volume control COMMUNICATIONS The Commodore 6 4 accepts a low-cost VICMODEMfMthrough ~ t s el ht b ~user t port, glvlng ~taccess to other computers over ordmary tegephone l~nes. The modem allows users to galn access to lar e data bases such as The Source, CompuServe and Dow Jones ~ e w s / K e t r ~ e vServ~ce a PERIPHERALS The Commodore 6 4 wdl support ~ v m r n v a u r er l d b d~reduyL I e d ~ e wd vdr I ~ L YUI p~U ~01 I I I> 1 1 I ~ G V C I categor~esfor the 6 4 and has plans for much, much more Busmess, make the personal, enterta~nmentand educat~onalappl~cat~ons Commodore 6 4 an enormously useful and versat~letool CP/Mm A 280 mlcroprocessor on a plug-~ncartr~dgemakes an enormous amount of software available to users of the 6 4 system BY ~ l u g g l n the optonal m~croprocessorinto the 64's 8 - b ~user t port, the user enabyes the Commodore to run programs wr~ttenIn CP/M@ CP/M@ 1s a registered trademark of Digital Research lnc Premlnary release lnformatlon Speclf~cattonssubject to change C-commodore COMPUTER