Reproduced March 18 2002 with permission from Maurizio Banavage.  Graphics added by Commodore.ca Nov 2018

Commodore-Computer-Factory-CBMIn 1954 Jack Tramiel founded Commodore as a typewriter repair service. Jack  Tramiel was Polish, and after Auschwitz he traveled to the United States and joined the Army.  After the army he decided to open a repair shop in the Bronx. Tramiel always had an inclination towards technology such as mechanical and electro-mechanical. Tramiel Moved again in 1955,  this time to Ontario, Canada becoming a low-cost office furniture  manufacturer.

In the 70’s there was a boom in the calculator and digital watches and although Tramiel ventured in this area in 1976 Commodore was on the edge of insolvency. Tramiel was saved by Irving Gould by lending him three million dollars and purchased MOS technologies. The acquisition was key to Tramiel’s philosophy of vertical integration. By production and distribution controlling, Commodore kept its costs very low and it’s  products competitive. Commodore was again transferred to the Bahamas in order to take advantage of lower taxes, which eventually the company came on its feet again.

The headquarters  and manufacturing base was in California.   The idea in the 70’s was that the future of computers was in databases which were accessed via  terminals. Desktop computers and affordable models were still a far reached idea. Tramiel refused to accept this. Determined as he was, in 1977 Commodore introduced the PET (Personal Electronic Transactor) which  was designed by Chuck Paddle and it was sold at $795. By the time PET was put on the market there were other competitors such as Tandy TRS-80 and Apple II. Always keeping the idea of  “User-Friendly” PET was composed of a Monitor, Keyboard and a Tape Drive which were housed in a plastic case.

commodore-sells_more_TORPET_Nov83The Vic20, with its 5K Ram was introduced in 1981. The Vic often ran out of memory before users finished writing their programs. Still the production reached up to 9000 a day, and 1982 it’s sales reached up to $305 Million. Commodore’s  hit on the market was the Commodore 64. Like the Vic 20 it came without a Monitor but it had 64K Ram. Sales reached nearly 22 Million Units in 1983. The market share of Commodore had become twice that of Apple and Tandy.

Also in 1983 Commodore introduced the SX-64 which was a portable computer and 1984 the Plus/4 was introduced with integrated software in Rom. The Largest revolution was the Amiga 1000 with 256kB Ram. The price for this Computer was $1,200, a though competitor for the Multimedia systems. The Amiga had many features such as built-in speech and text-to-speech conversion. Also Monitor could display multiple screens at different  resolutions. The Concept of home entertainment system was helped with the built in outputs for TVs and VCRs. Although Amiga 1000 had all these  features it not reached the scope Tramiel wanted, as Amiga was considered as a gaming machine. Still the company went towards the billion-dollar mark. Things were not going as they should and debts increased.

In January 1984 Tramiel sold his share but his past was never filled adequately. Irving Gould was Commodore’s new reigning CEO failed to grasp important industry trends. This caused commodore in isolation. Gould and his president Mehdi.R.Ali failed to understand the true nature of computer  industry. Marketing was done through word of mouth therefore consumers  were never informed about Commodore’s largest innovations. Commodore 64  had no marketing plan but still it was a great success. They wanted to do the same with the Amiga but circumstances were different.

commodore-share-certificateBy this time (1986-87) IBM had conquered the market and Bill Gate’s Micro$oft Windows catered for PC Compatibles. Apple introduced Macintosh, and Software markets started to show interest in IBM and Apple Computers. Although Commodore tried to put on the market add-ons which could allow users to run Macintosh and IBM Software, but it was to late. Loyal Customers continued to purchase  Commodore computers, which were continuously upgraded, but IBM and Apple had by now dominance in the computer market. For consumers who were not very enthusiastic with computers, in 1992 Commodore put on the market the Commodore Dynamic Television (CDTV) that played games and CD ROMs on normal TV Set. The successor of the CDTV was the CD32 with 32-bit memory. Although it was superior to products by Sega and 3DO, the CD32 did not reach the desired results. This time there was a more  studied marketing plan, but the budget was still low.

Amiga was the shining star, used by New Tek Inc’s Video Toaster a well Known video production tool. It was very much sought after by film and television studios but it was not enough to help the company back on its feet. The decline of Commodore reached its climax in 1993 with the loss of $357 Million. The Company made big efforts to keep its engineers, and keep the business running but these efforts were useless and in 1994  Commodore closed it’s doors forever.

3 Comments

Jurrasic · October 13, 2020 at 9:43 am

Alot of misinformation and fluff, Amigas were ‘continuously upgraded?’ NO that is what users were begging for. By 1989 or so the Amiga 500 was already long in the tooth, as PCs got VGA and Soundblaster cards. People begged for an upgraded Amiga with an enhanced 68030 or 040 CPU, a new chipset and at LEAST 4mb of RAM. We got the Amiga 600 instead. By the time the 1200 came out in 1992 it was FAR too late for Commodore, and so Mehdi Ali and Irving Gould savagely looted Commodore of it’s millions in cash assets and let the company float or drown on whatever goodwill was left in the community.

It was a shameful end, and Commodore should be where Apple is today. Infact, Jack Tramiel stupidly turned down a chance to BUY Apple when Steve Jobs came begging, but got greedy at the last minute and ended up losing what would have cemented his family’s name and Commodore’s name in computing history instead of being all but forgotten and it’s place in the industry kept alive only by knowlegable and heartbroken fans.

John Ropchan · August 24, 2020 at 9:28 pm

This is an awesome site. Great information. Thanks

Amiga (and other) misc links and videos – WebIT Tech Blog · August 30, 2020 at 4:13 am

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