This week at Flashbak, I remembered the Commodore VIC-202, the so-called "wonder computer" of the 1980s.
Here's a snippet, and the url (http://flashbak.com/remembering-wonder-computer-1980s-commodore-vic-20-47427/ )
"The first home computer to sell a million units was the Commodore VIC-20, an 8-bit unit hawked by Star Trek star William Shatner and released on the market in 1981.
Sold at a very reasonable $299.99, the Commodore VIC-20 was the best-selling computer of the 1982, and described as “revolutionary.”
Or, as the ads trumpeted: “a computer like this would have been science fiction a few years ago. Now it’s reality.”
Shatner’s TV commercials were effective, in part because the marketing technique involved positioning the VIC-20 against Atari 2600 and Intellivision game systems.
“Why buy just a video game?” Shatner queried, when “the whole family can learn to compute!” A key selling point was, accordingly, that this machine had a keyboard, not just joysticks."
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