Amiga,
a family of personal computers marketed by Commodore International from the mid 80s to the mid 90s. Amiga was based on 68000 series of microprocessors and a custom chipset with graphics and sound capabilities, and had a pre-emptive multitasking operating system called AmigaOS. While especially the Amiga 500 was quite successful in Europe, later models had a hard time to compete versus the upcoming AppleMacintosh and the IBM PC and its compatibles. In 2012, Commodore USA, LLC sell a new line of PCs using the classic Commodore and Amiga name brands of personal computers, having licensed the Commodore brand from Commodore Licensing BV on August 25, 2010 [1] and the Amiga brand from Amiga, Inc. on August 31, 2010 [2][3].
a family of personal computers marketed by Commodore International from the mid 80s to the mid 90s. Amiga was based on 68000 series of microprocessors and a custom chipset with graphics and sound capabilities, and had a pre-emptive multitasking operating system called AmigaOS. While especially the Amiga 500 was quite successful in Europe, later models had a hard time to compete versus the upcoming Apple Macintosh and the IBM PC and its compatibles. In 2012, Commodore USA, LLC sell a new line of PCs using the classic Commodore and Amiga name brands of personal computers, having licensed the Commodore brand from Commodore Licensing BV on August 25, 2010 [1] and the Amiga brand from Amiga, Inc. on August 31, 2010 [2] [3].
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Amiga Engines
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Models
Commodore
Amiga 500 Plus from Wikipedia (1991 - 1992)
Amiga 600 from Wikipedia (1992 - 1993)
Amiga 1200 from Wikipedia (1992 - 1996)
Amiga 3000 from Wikipedia (1990 - 1992)
Amiga 4000 from Wikipedia (1992 - 1994)
Escom
Hyperion Entertainment
Commodore USA
OS & Firmware
Chess Programs
Misc
Starring the Computer - The Rachel Papers (1989) » Battle Chess
References
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