Maximum PC

COMMODORE AMIGA (500)

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SPECIFICAT­ION CPU: Motorola 68000 @ 7.16MHz RAM: 512K (up to 8.5MB) GRAPHICS: 4,096 colors at 320x256, 16 colors 640x512 SOUND: Custom MOS Paula chip, 28KHz OS: AmigaOS 1.2 STORAGE: 3.5-inch floppy, optional hard disk RELEASED: July 1985 LAUNCH PRICE: $1,300 PRODUCTION: 1985–1996 WORLDWIDE SALES: 4.85 million llion

At first glance, it appears the ST had the Amiga licked for price and power, but look more closely, and the picture becomes very different. Both h these machines use the 68K CPU, but the Amiga had a large color palette and a proper multitaski­ng GUI.

More importantl­y, the Amiga was designed around multiple co-processors for handling audio, video, and memory access, thereby freeing up the CPU and outperform­ing the competitio­n. Unlike the ST, the Amiga had a great sound chip, with advanced features that wouldn’t be available on the PC for years.

While Atari had found an instant market with music composers, the Amiga had its own niche: video editing. With the right hardware, Amigas could “genlock” with video signals, matching their refresh rates, and enabling video overlays and easy effects. For a few grand, someone could get into profession­al video editing for less than a tenth of the cost of existing systems.

Modificati­on was very popular, and it was common to fit Amigas with expansion boards with a second CPU, enabling Mac or PC functional­ity. It didn’t take long for the Amiga to branch off into different, more advanced models, but it was the budget Amiga 500 that was the real hit. Released in 1987, the 500 was almost half the price of the original. Costs were cut by repackagin­g the bulky desktop case into micro form, new chipsets enabled simplified design, and lower RAM prices allowed for 512K of RAM.

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