How Jeff Bruette trolled his boss, Jack Tramiel

How Jeff Bruette trolled his boss, Jack Tramiel

When I interviewed Jeff Bruette about Andy Warhol, of course I couldn’t resist asking him about other things about Commodore. Bruette wasn’t strictly an Amiga guy. He started at Commodore during its 8-bit era, including programming Commodore versions of hit arcade games like Gorf. So of course I asked him what he thought about Commodore founder and longtime CEO Jack Tramiel. To celebrate Jack Tramiel’s birthday, December 13, 1928, let’s retell his favorite Jack Tramiel story.

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65c816 CPU: The chip in the Apple IIgs, SNES, and more

65c816 CPU: The chip in the Apple IIgs, SNES, and more

The Western Design Center 65c816 is an underdog CPU from the 1980s. It was never the best available CPU of its time and it was never the cheapest. It was a 16-bit CPU from a time of transition from 8 bits to 16 and 32 bits, released around the same time as the first fully 32-bit CPUs. But it’s an interesting CPU, even if it doesn’t get the attention other contemporary CPUs received. It was introduced the week of December 12, 1983.

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Atari’s earnings miss in December 1982

Atari’s earnings miss in December 1982

Atari’s biggest year was 1982, when it earned $320 million on $2 billion in sales. But it ended on a very sour note. On December 8, 1982, its parent company, Warner Bros, announced it expected a dramatic slump in fourth quarter per-share earnings largely because of disappointing sales of Atari’s video game cartridges. The news of Atari’s earning miss sent Warner’s stock price reeling, losing $16.75 per share the day after the announcement.

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Playstation audiophile CD player

Playstation audiophile CD player

You may have heard rumors of a Playstation audiophile CD player. That’s a bit of an exaggeration. But early models of the Sony Playstation do happen to be a much-better-than-average CD player. And to some extent, that propped up the value of original Playstations before this 30-year-old console, released in Japan December 3, 1994 and in North America on September 9, 1995, became collectible again.

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Fairchild Channel F: First of its kind

Fairchild Channel F: First of its kind

Fairchild isn’t the first name that comes to mind when it comes to video games. Consumer electronics wasn’t really their thing, and that might explain why they lost interest after only 3 years. But it’s easy to forget just how much of a disruptive force in the technology industry Fairchild was. In this blog post, we’ll explore Fairchild’s brief foray into video game consoles in the 1970s and its lasting influence that we’re still feeling today.

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