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I didn't want to come across as a fanboy, having already mentioned the C64 a few times in comments under other topics. The C64 does make a small appearance in the graph.
But if the topic is computers for the masses the C64 certainly should be mentioned as Jack Tramiel wanted to keep it relative low cost to allow more people to buy it. The ZX81 was affordable for the masses, the ZX Spectrum/C64/Amiga/Atari computers were bought by masses.
Maybe Linux should get a mention too, an operating system so cheap anyone can afford it and it runs on all kinds of hardware.
It kind of seems the writer just wanted to jump to the points he wanted to make about the more recent stuff.
But to be fair, it would make a very long article if he gave everything its credit.
When did that ever stop you before? ;P
TBH I find this particular series of articles somewhat devoid of much real content/insight... like the writer just wanted to publish something (but hey, gives a decent excuse to waste time in the comments)
that was my first though also
but I did not wan't to spoil article. yes, author should definitely read: "THE HOME COMPUTER WARS" by Michael S. Tomczyk
or, at least, could watch: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sIcAyFVK0gE
Edited 2012-08-29 09:13 UTC





Member since:
2005-07-06
Even worse transgression: no mention of the Commodore 64, the best-selling single computer model of all time, and which occupies a very large part in some of the linked diagrams http://jeremyreimer.com/postman/node/329 - it was basically the only thing really ever competing numerically with the IBM PC.

Still, I wonder how much the numbers used for those graphs are skewed for North American market - apparently ( http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ZX_Spectrum ), the Spectrum family sold 5+ million units not counting clones; considering that C=64 sold ~15 million, Speccy should be easily visible on the graph & much more than "Other".
Oh, and no mention of the Amiga, the sign of things to come WRT multimedia for the masses.
But what really surprises me is that you, MOS6510, didn't grumble about those two omissions