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I remember when they first came out and literally standing glued to the floor, multiple active windows, it was the first time I ever saw that.

The only other machines at the time capable of doing that were priced way out of ordinary mortals budget.

There as the Acorn 'unicorn', probably the cheapest and then right away big $ stuff like the Apollos.

There was no way I could afford a machine like that (nor the Amiga, for that matter, at least not at that time) so I stuck to my trusty 8 bitter for a bit longer and built the Elektuur 'GDP', a hardware assist for vector graphics.

But it never looked as good as the Amiga OS.



Same here. I brought home the BYTE issue with it on its cover and read the article eagerly. At that time, importing personal computers into Brazil was forbidden, and it took me a couple years to see an Amiga face to face, but from the extensive coverage, I was very impressed. I stuck to my Apple II for a couple more years before, grudgingly, moving to a v20-based PC.

I never saw a 1000 in person, but I am the happy owner of a 500, and it's a centerpiece of my "interesting computer" collection.

I really miss the 80's in that: you could tell different computers apart. Now even Macs are PCs...


> [...] I stuck to my trusty 8 bitter for a bit longer and built the Elektuur 'GDP', a hardware assist for vector graphics.

Interesting... This one? http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Acorn_Electron#Slogger.2FElektu...


Close :) BBC model B.




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