The following material is speaking notes for a presentation I made at York University on Friday March 18th, 2005. Since they are speaking notes, they are not exactly in publication form; and, at the presentation, I might well have omitted some material and added other stuff (especially in response to questions).
Information on the York University Museum for early microcomputers can be obtained from: See http://www.cse.yorku.ca/museum/
There is also a microcomputer museum in Brantford, Ontario. See http://www.pcmuseum.ca
I.
A little about myself.
I’m Jim
Butterfield. My first encounters with computers took place back in 1963. My background was math and electronics,
working mostly in the field of telecommunications. My first machine was a computer nobody had heard of: the Collins
C8401, programmed in assembly language.
So when microcomputers started to arrive in 1976, I had an advantage over
most hobbyists: I’d worked with
computers for a dozen years or more. I
was in a good position to write about these devices, which were unfamiliar to
most readers. And I did so.
Most of my experience was with Commodore computers. What follows will be from that viewpoint,
and I’ll talk almost exclusively about the 8-bit world. It was a fun time.
I should mention that I have never been an employee of Commodore, or
owned stock in the company. My viewpoint is that of an outsider, although
Commodore personnel have always been open and frank in responding to the many
questions I have asked over the years.
II.
Industry prologue.
By 1963, transistors had replaced vacuum tubes, and the industry had
settled into a form of stability.
Although there were a number of computer manufacturers, IBM enjoyed over
two-thirds of the market. Industry watchers often referred to ‘IBM and the
seven dwarfs.’
Why did IBM dominate? In part, it
was because they had been in the data processing business long before the
arrival of computers. Using Hollerith
punched cards, IBM had an array of “unit record” equipment such as keypunch
devices, tabulators, and sorters; they had decades of experience in handling
data.
A second reason for IBM’s strength was that they leased their equipment
rather than selling it. And with the lease came support, with system engineers
on site or on call. Industry people talked about being sheltered by the “IBM
umbrella.”
And, as a general rule, software was free. Assemblers, compilers, report generators … phone your IBM rep and
he’d send over a copy. Need personnel
training? IBM would do it free. Or, at least, at no extra charge.
III.
Underground fun.
Even in those days, computer programmers and operators would have secret
amusements. Secret, because senior
management would have misgivings about ‘horsing around’ on a multi-million
dollar computer.
Pictures were drawn on the line printer, patterns generated on punched
card or paper tape, games were created and played, jokes were being played on
co-workers, and music was being played on these computers. Note how the word ‘play’ seems to be
repeated.
The seemingly impossible job of playing music on computers that had no
speakers was accomplished in several ways.
The hammers of line printers could be carefully timed to produce sounds
of a selected pitch; the paper-advance chain could be declutched and made to
furnish drum rhythms. And a transistor
radio placed adjacent to the CPU, where it would pick up the electromagnetic
emissions, would play a selection of popular numbers.
In the time frame between 1963 and 1971, there were a number of changes
that helped shape the nature of microcomputers-to-come.
Minicomputers started to gain acceptance in 1965 with the Digital
Equipment Corporation PDP-8. These
“minis” were stripped-down computers, designed to sell for a paltry $10,000 or
so. In the early days, magnetic core
memory was a major cost impediment, and attempts were made to circumvent it
with other resources. I recall that the
PDP-8S used a serial memory (a mercury column delay line). It was said that if you stamped on the
floor, you could change its memory contents.
Minicomputer technology didn’t have much effect on future
microcomputers. But it’s interesting to
note that a powerful user group, DECUS, grew around the PDP series, and may
have been a precursor to microcomputer user groups that appeared much later.
In 1965, General Electric introduced “Time-Sharing” service, where users
could concurrently make use of a central computer. The terminal device was usually a Teletype™ machine. The major impact of time-sharing on the
future microcomputers was its choice of language: Basic, both adored and vilified.
By 1971, the expensive and labour-intensive magnetic core memory that had
been the heart of computers started to be replaced by semiconductor
memory. This set the stage for ongoing
price reductions, which we still see today.
This, in turn, spawned another product that was to become important in
the future microcomputer world: the
floppy disk. Magnetic core memory had
been non-volatile: once loaded, it kept
its contents even when power was off.
Semiconductor memory needed to be reloaded, and the 8-inch floppy disk
was created by IBM for this purpose.
Initially, it was a read-only device, whose contents would be created at
the IBM production facility.
As fabrication techniques were advanced, more and more elements could be
packed onto an integrated circuit chip.
The first chips were flip-flops and gates. Then came larger assemblies such as shift registers and ALUs
(arithmetic/logic units). Inevitably, a complete CPU (Central Processing Unit)
would be placed onto a single chip.
With a collection of chips such as CPU, memory, input/output, and some
sort of control logic in a ROM (Read Only Memory), a complete computer system
could be put together.
The first microcomputer that I know of was made in 1970 by an
almost-forgotten company called Viatron.
Viatron’s main marketing thrust was terminal devices as inexpensive
substitutes for Teletype™ machines, which were priced in the $1,000 to $1,500
region.
Viatron’s concept and design was good, and they advertised massivly in
Datamation magazine. But their
fabrication plant had poor chip yields, and eventually they disappeared from
the scene.
The Viatron era called for some technical innovation. CRT display devices were rare and generally
costly; modestly priced printers were virtually unknown. Viatron's use of converted television
displays and “printing robots” seems quaint today.
Intel entered the microcomputer field in 1971 with the 4004. It seems
almost as if Intel wasn’t planning this as a product; they needed to find a
quick way to fulfil their contract to build a calculator for a Japanese firm,
and devising and programming a microcomputer seemed to be the quickest method.
But once the 4004 had been devised, the electronics industry accepted it
quickly as a general-purpose component which replaced wiring with code.
Motorola announced their 6800 chip very quickly.
There was a rush to build. Even
before computers were offered in kit form, hobbyists were salvaging parts and
building logic devices. A friend of
mine, Julien Dubé, salvaged some magnetic core memory from a telecommunications
relay device, and restrung the little ferromagnetic doughnuts into a working
memory, with a view to creating a small computer of his own design.
Kits came on the market from various small entrepreneurs. Electronic houses produced their own
versions, which consisted of a circuit board and a bunch of chips loose in a
plastic bag. Sometimes the supplied
circuit boards had printed circuit connections; other times you were expected
to make the connections yourself using wire wrap techniques (rarely soldering). Sometimes the parts worked, sometimes they
were defective, and sometimes incorrect wiring would wreck the chip. A saying of the times was, “All computer
chips are powered by smoke; if the smoke gets out, the chip will fail.”
When the December 1975 issue of Popular Electronics described the Altair
8800 computer, available in kit form for about $500, the computer hobbyist
world took off.
The Apple I was also a kit that you needed to assemble yourself. The founders of Apple – Wozniak and Jobs –
liked the new, inexpensive 6502 chip, and designed their system around it.
Users started to get together and swap notes. In the Toronto area, TRACE (Toronto Regional Association of
Computer Enthusiasts) was under way in early 1976. An amazing assortment of machines was under construction. Some liked the Intel 4004 or 8008, some the
Motorola 6800. Memory was whatever came to hand, seldom more than 256
bytes. And input/output … paper tape,
toggle switches, home-brew keyboards, LED or LCD character or numeric displays,
arrays of LED lights. Whatever you
could get your hands on, or afford.
There was little commonality between one home-brew machine and the next.
Oddly, few of the builders had any idea of what to do with the computer
once it was complete. This may have been due, in part, to the shortage of
programming skills; and lack of standardization across the assortment of
machines also posed difficulties in conceptualization.
In 1977 and 1978, the Ontario Science Centre invited TRACE members to
display their home computers to the public.
One member’s computer controlled a model train set; another played
simple logic games; one played simple music tunes. And I believe a couple just
sat there, perhaps blinked lights, and looked pretty.
There was an attempt to introduce some standards into this tower of Bit
Babel. Two areas of concern seemed to
be: a standard wiring concept, to connect several boards; secondly, a way to
exchange data.
The S-100 bus was conceived as a standardized way to pass information
between the various units of the computer.
It included schemes for pin numbering and for power distribution. It was in use for a number of years until
the IBM PC juggernaut took over.
A form of standardization existed for paper tape input and output,
carried over from teleprinter days. An attempt was made to generate an audio
data standard, mostly for data storage on cassette tapes, called the Kansas
City Standard. It didn’t take hold.
The Basic language was starting to creep into the scene. Hot debates were taking place between users
on the west coast of the USA as to how a simple Basic interpreter could be
constructed in a small amount of memory storage: 8K, 4K, or even 2K. “Tiny
Basic” was produced as a free program; to publish it, the authors started a
publication which they called “Dr. Dobbs Journal of Computer Calisthenics and
Orthodontia.” At that time, Dr. Dobbs
was conceived as a public domain vehicle; all material in it was free from
copyright. The publication still
exists, but the whimsical name has been truncated to “Dr. Dobbs Journal.” … and
its contents are now copyright.
A side comment on whimsical names:
when Gary Kildall developed a standard operating system, he called his
distribution company “Intergalactic Digital Research.” A few years later, as IBM entered the field,
the “Intergalactic” was dropped. In a
similar vein, Commodore called their first home computer “PET”, perhaps after
the “Pet Rock” fad; but later regretted the name as they tried to convince the
marketplace that their products were serious business machines. I’m sure they were not influenced by the
fact that “PET” means flatulence in French.
My first microcomputer – other than a logic device powered by rubber
bands that I had constructed years before – was the MOS Technology KIM-1. KIM stands for “Keyboard Input Monitor”,
which was the operating system of this tiny single-board machine.
The “engine” of the KIM-1 is a 6502 microprocessor. This chip was designed by a group of
ex-Motorola employees, who took the design of the Motorola 6800 and introduced
new concepts and improvements. Leading
the team was Chuck Peddle, a name you’ll hear again in this presentation.
The 6502 was a late arrival into the early microprocessor world. Motorola and Intel chips had already gained
acceptance; and even though the 6502 would outperform them, its merits were not
immediately recognized. So MOS
Technology priced the chip well below the competition: the 6502 was $25 in
single unit quantities; competitive chips were around $150 and had to be
ordered in batches of 100.
After the 6502 was completed, and legal disputes settled, MOS Technology
decided that they should produce an “engineering sampler” board, which would
show what the chip could do. They
populated the board not only with microprocessor, RAM, and input/output; they
also added a teletype interface, an LED display, a 20-key keypad, a facility
for audio output and input (to save programs), and an operating system called
KIM. And the board was
factory-assembled; all you had to do was to add a power supply and you had a
complete system.
Here’s the important part: because the board came pre-assembled, everyone
had exactly the same system. For the
first time, you could swap programs with other users and be confident that they
would work without being “touched up” to fit the system.
I wrote a few programs – games, amusements, utilities – and wrote MOS
Technology to see if anyone wanted them.
They wanted them for themselves in order to demonstrate the KIM-1, and
had also heard from a fellow in the Cleveland area who was starting a
newsletter. And thus began “Kim User Notes”, edited by Eric Rehnke.
The newsletter acquired hundreds of subscribers. MOS Technology must have been amazed to see
this intended engineering prototype become a popular home gizmo. In time, it also became widely used as a
training device.
About that time, I heard from a young fellow who worked at Honeywell who
said he was working on a program for the KIM-1. His name was Peter Jennings, and his project was to write a
chess-playing program in the KIM’s tiny 1K of RAM. He did it, too. In these
days of gigabyte memory, it’s sometimes refreshing to think that Peter could
play chess with only a little over 1K … even if it didn’t play at a grandmaster
level. Peter later went on to be one of
the creators of code for Visicalc, the first microcomputer spreadsheet program.
Meanwhile, there had been a few personal-computer publications. During
his time with a minicomputer firm, David Ahl had gathered together various
games that users had contributed, and published “101 Basic Games”. On the west coast, Bob Albrecht had formed a
group called “People’s Computer” and had produced a similar volume entitled
“What To Do After You Hit Return.” In
both books, the programs were supplied in the language Basic. They could be played on time-sharing
systems, or Basic could be fitted to those computers that had enough memory –
not very many of them in the early days.
Meanwhile, we KIM-1 users were contributing lots of programs to be printed
in KIM User Notes. I suggested to
another user, Stan Ockers, that perhaps we should bundle them together and put
them into a book. The editor of the
Notes, Eric Rehnke joined us in the enterprise and we privately printed The
First Book of KIM.
As best I recall, we estimated our market at about 600 copies. We printed 2,000, sold about 1,000, and the
remaining copies burned up in a garage fire. There was still demand for the
book; people got mad at us when we said we had no more copies. So a publisher picked up the demand, and
many thousands more were sold. There
were also two editions printed in Germany, one authorized and one pirated. The authorized publisher never sent any
royalties; the pirate publisher sent us secret payments. Go figure.
In late 1976, we heard that MOS Technology had been acquired by a firm
called Commodore, which was known for making office furniture and
calculators. There was to be a new
microcomputer system called the PET.
The KIM-1 thus became a Commodore product, which is why I sometimes say
that I programmed Commodore computers before they made computers.
Jack Tramiel was the founder of Commodore Business Machines. A former inmate of Auschwitz, Tramiel had
started out with a part-time typewriter repair shop in the Bronx, supplemented
by driving a taxi. In 1962, he moved to Toronto and set up a typewriter
manufacturing business. He soon
switched to calculators, and these devices soon made the transition from
mechanical devices to electronics.
In October 1976, Tramiel took over MOS Technologies, which he perceived
as a manufacturer of display devices and semiconductors. He got more than he bargained for. He also got Chuck Peddle, the designer of
the 6502 chip. And Peddle was determined
to build a home computer.
Peddle had taken a look at a prototype version of the Apple ][, and had
wondered if Commodore should buy the company.
He eventually decided that Commodore should build a home computer of
their own design, and quickly talked Tramiel into it. An early model of the PET was shown to Radio Shack, in the hopes
that they would sell the unit; but Radio Shack, in turn, opted to build their
own home computer.
Commodore had undergone some trauma in its organization and financing. As part of a new corporate financing deal,
corporate headquarters was moved to the Bahamas, and administrative offices
were set up in the Philadelphia area. But Tramiel’s heart apparently remained
in Toronto. The corporate airplane –
the PET jet – was often to be seen in a hangar at Pearson airport during the
many years that followed.
Three companies – Apple, Commodore, and Radio Shack – seemed to announce
their models of a home computer simultaneously. The question of “who was first?”
will never be solved. Commodore displayed the PET at the Consumer Electronics
show in January 1977. Apple sold its
first unit at the March West Coast Computer Faire. Radio Shack didn’t enter the field with the TRS-80 until August,
but they were able to sell units in quantity right away.
Here in Toronto, we first saw Commodore computers in quantity at the
Canadian National Exhibition. One of
the Ex’s themes for that year was “chess”.
Commodore furnished dozens of PET computers, furnished with Peter
Jennings’ Microchess program, at a site in the Coliseum area; visitors were
invited to sit down and play chess.
With little access to a dealer network, Commodore had a curious method of
achieving sales. Buyers would send
Commodore money – about $600 US – and Commodore expected that they would ship
the PET within three months! A lot of
PET deliveries in this area took place immediately after the CNE closed.
The Commodore PET was a remarkable machine in many ways, with features
you did not find on its competitors of the time. Many might be considered ahead of their time.
The PET, and all following 8-bit products, had “screen editing”. Instead
of receiving information from the keyboard, the operating system transferred
the received keystrokes to the computer screen. When a RETURN key was pressed, the system then read from the
current line of the screen, and took the data from there. This made screen editing simple and truly
WYSIWYG (“what you see is what you get”), and later allowed some elegant
programming tricks. This was far from intuitive back in the days when much
computing was based on teleprinter input.
Associated with this was the concept of keyboard interrupt handling. Since most keystrokes were collected into a
buffer for subsequent delivery to the screen, the main system could ignore them
and go on with whatever job it was doing, allowing an interrupt service to take
care of this. The result was a
“type-ahead” feature, not seen on other contemporary computers; for those, the
keyboard was dead until a program specifically asked for input.
Computer input was thought of in those days as a teleprinter device or
equivalent. As such, input and output was upper case only; a full ASCII
capability was unheard of. Commodore added an upper/lower case facility to the
PET. However, the fixation on upper case was such that lower case was
“inverted” – that is, you had to shift to get lower case letters. The Radio Shack TRS-80 had no lower case;
the Apple ][ had “slots”, or board plug-in positions, where upper/lower case
could be added at a later time.
The Commodore PET was introduced without peripherals such as printer or
floppy disk; it took almost a year for these devices to appear. But the
interface was already in place, and it was an interesting one: the
Hewlett-Packard GPIB (“General Purpose Interface Bus”), also know as the
IEEE-488 bus. It was possible right
from the start to connect to specialized devices, such as sensors, which had already
been devised for this bus. When the
Commodore disk drives and printers appeared, they would string together on this
bus. It was decades before the introduction of the USB (“Universal Serial Bus”)
would use a similar scheme.
The use of such a bus called for intelligent peripherals. When the Commodore devices finally appeared,
they had their own microcontrollers and logic; in the case of disk drives, that
included a sophisticated DOS, which wrote data to disk in a more sophisticated
way than other drives of that generation.
Although “back end computers” were known in the mainframe environment,
their use in the micro world was, to put it mildly, innovative. Meanwhile, competing machines of the era had
to have DOS loaded into the main computer.
Commodore somehow made a deal with Microsoft for a perpetual license for
Microsoft Basic. I don’t know of any other manufacturer who obtained such a
license, and it gave Commodore a major competitive edge for the entire life of
its eight-bit products. Microsoft had
not at that time achieved major sales, and Bill Gates was complaining loudly
and publicly about software piracy. Perhaps Tramiel and Peddle offered a deal
that appeared attractive for the time. Microsoft later regretted the deal, and
internal memos within Commodore urged employees to disclose no information
about Basic, for fear of litigation.
In contrast, Apple initially had only “integer Basic”, whose arithmetic
was based on 16-bit integers. This gave
speed, but limited the usage. The Radio
Shack TRS-80 had “tiny Basic”, as published in Doctor Dobbs Journal. Eventually, both of them migrated to
Microsoft Basic; but royalty payments to Microsoft became a factor in their
product pricing.
Even when the competition joined the Microsoft bandwagon, the Commodore
version still had an advantage.
“Commodore Basic,” as it was called, had a 32-bit mantissa, which
computer techs will tell you produces about 10 decimal digits of numeric
accuracy. Other versions had only a 24-bit mantissa, perhaps to enhance speed;
but this will give an accuracy of only about 7 digits, which is not enough for
financial work.
A proliferation of magazines and newsletters came with the advances in
microcomputer technology.
Like Doctor Dobbs, BYTE magazine arrived early. Its first year contained articles such as how to build your own
wire-wrap tool out of a ballpoint refill, and how to punch paper tape so that
humans could hold it up to the light and read actual text.
The Commodore world hosted many newsletters. “The PET Paper” was told by Commodore to remove the PET
reference, which they viewed as a trademark; it became “The XXX Paper”, a title
which might raise some eyebrows in this day and age.
Len Lindsay published “The PET Gazette”. He became overwhelmed by the volume
of material arriving, and public begged for someone to take over the job on his
behalf. Robert Lock of Greensboro,
North Carolina, did this in autumn of 1979. COMPUTE magazine developed into a
major publication; in the late 1960s, it became the largest selling
microcomputer publication of them all. It ceased publication in the late 90s.
“The Transactor” began as a single sheet newsletter issued by Commodore
Canada. After a couple of issues, a young fellow called Karl Hildon was hired
to keep it going as a customer information vehicle. Hildon built it into a respectable technical journal. When Commodore tired of it, Hildon found
another company in the Toronto area willing to continue publication. The
Transactor folded in the late 90s, but was considered a major technical source
during its lifetime.
Shortly after the arrival of the first few PET computers in Toronto, I
received a call from Lyman Duggan, who worked for Marconi. He wanted to know
why nobody was organizing a user group; I gave him the usual answer. So sometime in 1979, about sixteen
interested users gathered in the rec room of Lyman’s apartment block, and TPUG
– at that time, called Club 2001, after the PET 2001 - was born.
Duggan ran TPUG as a private enterprise. He arranged program and
location, charged five dollars for attendance, and served coffee and
doughnuts. His wife, Cherie, had
cassette tapes containing contributed programs which sold for a dollar or two.
Attendance grew rapidly, and Duggan had to seek out ever larger sites for
the meetings. Then, with little
warning, his employee posted him to Florida. Duggan quickly nominated a board
of directors to replace him, and TPUG became a member’s club.
The Toronto area had quite a few talented people who could be called upon
to make presentations, offer opinions, or disseminate news. Apart from myself, we had Karl Hildon,
editor of The Transactor; Brad Templeton, who later went on to become the
publisher of Clarion online service; Steve Punter, who wrote the first major
word processor package for Commodore, and numerous others. And I have a special
affection for the antics of Brett Butler, one of the first PET owners in the
Toronto area, who wrote a tiny program for his wife who was in the late stages of
pregnancy: tap any key, and the PET would show time elapsed since the previous
contraction.
Computer enthusiasts were regarded as mavericks. Few of those who worked in the field of data
processing would have any association with microcomputers. I suspect the
reasons for this are varied. Perhaps there would be a loss of corporate
prestige to admit that those little thousand-dollar machines were capable of
taking on some tasks, when DP personnel had million-dollar machines as their
private domain. It seemed that some users would believe only what IBM told
them; and, at that time, IBM had no interest in giving any credibility to these
pesky little machines.
There were rebels. A Vice
President of Air Canada used a Commodore PET to plan fuel needs at various
airports; but he had to hide his machine from the DP mavens, who didn’t
approve. A regional education officer in northern Ontario supported
microcomputers in schools, and helped assembly a body of educational software;
all the while, the Department of Education wanted all educational flow to be
centralized.
TPUG prospered, and its influence went far beyond Ontario’s boundaries,
or even those of North America. Today, it may be difficult to comprehend the
difficult in distributing free programs across the country or around the
world. We use the internet. Back then,
you put cassette tapes in the mail, or, later, floppy disks. And a central
clearing point produced better organization.
TPUG was it, for many years; most Commodore clubs across North America
became associate TPUG members.
Membership reached a peak in 1984 of about 17,000 members. TPUG now had a full-time staff for handling
memberships and mailing requested programs, and another full-time staff to
publish the TPUG magazine. There was a
lot of money flowing into TPUG, and it seemed to me that this caused dissention
between members of the executive and the staff.
An early online service, “The Source” opened for business in 1979, and
was soon followed by another, Compuserve. A service specific to the Commodore
64, Quantum, became available in 1985.
There started to be other ways to distribute programs. And the internet was coming.
Online services, and a shift to other manufacturers computers, caused a
further decline in membership. And this caused disputes to become more
pronounced. It’s easy to bring in new
equipment and new staff in prosperous times; it’s not so easy to start cutting
back. Many old-timers dropped out of
the TPUG picture. But TPUG survived,
and is still active today. I’m told that the next World of Commodore gathering
will take place this December.
The original PET 2001 was soon followed by bigger models, with more
memory or 80 column screens. Commodore did its best to drop the name PET in
favour of CBM, so as to establish a business image. At one time, it even tried
to disenfranchise one of its major retail outlets because it thought the name
was too frivolous: Batteries
Included. The outlet set up a
subsidiary with a “sensible” name, and continued to handle Commodore machines.
Commodore technicians built prototypes of many imaginative machines. One
of these, called the TOI, had a colour screen, graphics and sound capability;
it eventually became the VIC-20. The
22-column screen of the VIC-20 made it of little utility with text
applications, but it worked well with graphics, and became popular as a game
machine. The VIC-20 was still a full-featured computer, complete with the
Commodore Basic language, and many people used it to learn computer
programming.
There’s a believable story that, long before, the chip manufacturer Texas
Instruments had cost Commodore and Jack Tramiel a great deal of money on plans
he had made for a calculator. The story continues that Tramiel swore revenge;
and when Texas Instruments came out with a computer of their own, the TI-99, he
launched an economic war.
Whatever the truth of the story, it’s true that Tramiel was very good at
pruning prices, pressing suppliers to drop costs in order to allow him to pitch
extremely competitive retail prices.
And with his next product, the Commodore 64, he trashed most of the
competition … including Texas Instruments.
At one point, Commodore was offering $100 as a trade-in for any make or
model of computer. Since the Sinclair/Timex Spectrum was selling for about $60
at that time, Commodore received a considerable number of these units, still in
their shrink-wrap packaging. The local
user group told me that Commodore had no use for these trade-ins, and they went
directly to the trash bit. At night,
members of the club would pick these back out of the trash, and turn them back
in the next day for another discount.
Doctor Wesley Graham, of the Computer Science department of Waterloo
University, thought that the CBM computers could be expanded and modified so as
to allow students to take language training on them. Waterloo was already noted for its “training” languages, such as
WatFor, a training dialogue of Fortran.
Together with hardware assistance from BMB Compuscience, a retailer and
hardware designer in the Milton area, they devised “The SuperPET”, a machine
with dual processors. One “side” was a
standard CBM computer; the other was a Motorola 6809-based system fitted with
several languages. Perhaps the most startling of these was APL (“A Programming
Language”), developed by Ken Iverson, which used a completely different
character set to undertake its computations.
The SuperPET was well respected and used in training environments, but
never became a mainstream machine. I often wondered if adding language
compilers – in addition to the interpreters that Waterloo had furnished – might
make it world-beating commercial machine.
Following the success of the 64, Commodore tackled the objective of
making a set of scaled-down computers: the Commodore Plus/4 and its smaller
cousin, the Commodore 16. I had some
involvement in this product: I was invited to introduce it at the Consumer
Electronics Show in Las Vegas, 1984.
Inside the Plus-4 and Commodore 16 was … almost ... nothing. The various support
chips that had been needed to make things work had been telescoped into a
single interface chip called TED. So
there was TED, the processor, and on the Plus/4, an ACIA chip (similar to a
UART) for higher-speed communications.
Manufacturing costs must have been remarkable low for a computer with so
few parts. But before the show, the marketing mavens told me they planned to
set the price high so that it wouldn’t impact sales of the Commodore 64. They
succeeded beyond their wildest dreams; the Plus/4 and its smaller cousin bombed
in the market.
They gave up on this new line, reasoning that the marketplace required
compatibility. Their next product was the Commodore 128, which was highly
compatible – a switch converted it into a 64 clone – but could be switched into
CP/M mode for anyone who wanted that style of compatibility.
On the “business computer” side, Commodore meddled with expanded memory.
In Europe, they tried new cast stylings, and at one point almost introduce “the
Porsche PET”, whose case had been designed by the Porsche team.
Then they tried another approach to higher speed and more memory. The B128 and B256 computers were built, but
Commodore couldn’t get them going on schedule.
Eventually, they were made to work, but it was too late for the
marketplace, and Commodore blew them out their back door using a
clearinghouse. It worked well, and many
users loved them; but it was a Commodore ex-product, and Commodore didn’t make
them any more.
It was becoming clear that Commodore was reaching a dead end in the 8-bit
world. Commodore acquired the Amiga, originally planned as a game machine, and
reconfigured it for a business/entertainment market.
But that’s another story, and this presentation is following the fate of
the Commodore 8-bit world.
When the IBM PC was announced in August 1981, Commodore users couldn’t
believe that anyone would try to sell a machine that was so underpowered and
overpriced. $3,000 for a little machine with 16K of RAM, expandable to 32K, black-and-white
only, disk drive extra? And their first floppy disk drives could store only
160K of data, where Commodore drives ranged up to 1.2 megabytes in capacity.
And, powered by an Intel 8088, it wasn’t exactly a 16-bit machine; just part 16
and part 8.
But the name IBM had credibility, and it sold well, beyond IBM’s
expectations. At one point, I told Commodore that their mistake was in picking
the wrong first letter for their initials; change the “C” to an “I” and they’d
be in business.
IBM made frequent upgrades to their product line – from PC to XT to AT.
The machines became truly 16-bit, and were fitted with formidable memory and
improved disk drives. At each new product announcment, to IBM’s astonishment,
the new unit quickly sold its initial production, and then sales dropped off
radically. If it was off the shelf, user didn’t want it; they always wanted the
next generation.
All other brands of small computer were seriously impacted. To our
surprise, people would buy these expensive machines, borrow software from their
place of business, and set up these machine in their home. PC user groups expanded at a startling
rate. And when, in 1983, Compaq and
others broke the IBM stranglehold on the PC design, prices dropped and sales
exploded. By that time, the PC
architecture clearly outperformed the 8-bit computers in raw computer power,
although they still performed poorly in the graphics and games area.
Commodore introduced its own line of PC-compatibles in 1987. These sold
well in Europe and reasonably well in Canada.
The US market was never penetrated to any significant extent, and they
ceased production in 1993..
Oh, and just to prove that IBM isn’t perfect: their scaled-down PC Junior
failed miserably.
Commodore had run out of steam on the 8-bit track, and were concentrating
all their efforts on the Amiga. It wasn’t enough, and Commodore as we knew it
broke up in April 1994.
Commodore was gone, but the name stayed. It was sold and resold to a
number of organizations, most of whom were in Europe, where the name was viewed
favourably by consumers.
XIX.
Follow on: Loyalties remain.
Magazines scaled down and ceased publication. User groups dwindled. But loyalties remain. Many users haunt
thrift stores for old Commodore computers and spare parts. There are continuing
rumours that both the Commodore computers and the Amiga will be reborn in some
form or other.
Meanwhile, “64 emulators” can be run on a PC which closely match the
behaviour of the original machine. It’s not the same, of course; part of the
joy was the things you could hook up to the machine.
Small user groups still gather in Canada and the USA. In mid-May, there
will be a gathering in Louisville, Kentucky. In September, I expect that there
will be something in the Chicago area. There has been talk of something in Las
Vegas this year. And TPUG tells me that
the World of Commodore will take place once again in Toronto sometime in early
December.
Here’s a story of dedication and loyalty. Back in the Commodore heyday, a young girl loved her Commodore 64
so much, and was so curious about its inner workings, that she destroyed quite
a few of them in trying to find out how it works. She was determined that some
day, she would construct a Commodore 64.
Her name is Jeri Ellsworth, and she did it. She built a complete Commodore 64 on a chip: processor, video,
sound, operating system … the whole works. Her most recent creation is the
64DTV, a Commodore 64 on a tiny chip buried inside a joystick, including about
30 games of the era. Without a keyboard, it’s hard to program, but it can be
done. Without a disk interface, it’s hard to store or load other programs – but
a good hardware hacker can construct one, and some have done so.
It’s quite a feat. And it makes
me think that perhaps the Commodore 64 will live forever.
--30--