I had an Amiga 500 and it was great for graphics. Ok not as good as the
2000. For everything else it was Atari for me. Still Jack though.
Al

-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On
Behalf Of Ted Roche


After my military service, I moonlighted at The Memory Location in
Wellesley, MA, an all-Commodore shop, and usually took my paycheck home in
toys. I was president of the Foxboro Area Commodore User Group, newsletter
editor, BBS SysOp (with an SFD-1001 1 Mb floppy and an IEEE interface!).
Eventually we were printing our newsletter in Postscript on an NEC
SilentWriter 890. I beta-tested GEOS software, wrote my first public domain
software (an Epson quad-density printer driver), got to hang out with the
legendary Jim Butterfield one weekend in Boston during a Commodore
convention. I had a C=64 with the memory expander with extra memory for a
full megabyte, the 1581 3.5" drive. Thanks to the store, I played with all
the latest toys. After Jack Trameil left Commodore, Commodore went on to
purchase the Amiga computers. I had a 500 and a souped-up 2000. Great
machines.

If you're interested in Commodore history, Brian Bagnall wrote "On the
Edge: the Spectacular Rise and Fall of Commodore" which you can likely find
in your local library.



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