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Music Media Hardware

Commodore - Back In The Hardware Biz At Last? 400

Aphrika writes "Commodore is back in the hardware business [via current owners Tulip Computers] and this time they're taking on... Apple? Due for release in August are three MP3 players; the eVic, fPet and mPet. The eVic is a 20GB (hence the name) hard drive-based player, while the mPet and fPet are closer to the Muvo/iRiver styled flash players. They'll also be hoping you pay a visit to the Commodore World Music Store once in a while to stock up on tunes..." We also recently mentioned Commodore's 'TV Game' and ROM-store projects over at Slashdot Games.
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Commodore - Back In The Hardware Biz At Last?

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  • by krray ( 605395 ) * on Wednesday June 30, 2004 @09:36PM (#9577919)
    I was a C=64 owner and fan back in their day which was my youth. Ironically today I'm a Linux zealot and Mac lover and go no where without my iPod.

    I'm torn. I feel ashamed because of it. Bastards.
    • by gloth ( 180149 ) on Wednesday June 30, 2004 @09:51PM (#9578003)
      If you're torn, remember that the C=64 came with Basic from *gasp* Microsoft! What? You feel a bit less torn now that you remember? Thought so!
      • by thedillybar ( 677116 ) on Wednesday June 30, 2004 @10:04PM (#9578072)
        NO!!! If this is true, you didn't have to tell me! I was better off not knowing. Damn Slashdot.
      • So did the Apple, if you remember. In fact, it could be said that Apple's devotion to Microsoft BASIC is the reason [folklore.org] we have Windows today.

        The basic premise is this: in exchange for the rights to license AppleBASIC from Microsoft, some pinhead (who had been tasked with the deal because Jobs didn't think the Apple II had a future) gave the software company full rights to the Macintosh look and feel. Viola! Windows, all nice and legal -- and basically for free.
        • by thephotoman ( 791574 ) on Wednesday June 30, 2004 @10:50PM (#9578298) Journal
          While Microsoft got the rights to the look and feel legally, they didn't get the rights to the security, functionality, and sheer usability. Basically, they got the rights to make crap look pretty.
        • The basic premise is this: in exchange for the rights to license AppleBASIC from Microsoft, some pinhead (who had been tasked with the deal because Jobs didn't think the Apple II had a future) gave the software company full rights to the Macintosh look and feel. Viola!

          If you spell that word wrong again, I'll express my anger with violins.

        • Wrong, wrong, wrong.

          You need to be reading your Apple II History [apple2history.org], not just Folklore's Mac history.

          The relevant parts of how Applesoft BASIC came to the Apple II:

          Back in 1975 and 1976, Microsoft was producing BASIC interpreters for nearly every microprocessor that was produced, in hopes of licensing or selling their BASIC to those who built a computer around that chip. In mid-1976, Microsoft's first employee, Marc McDonald, was given the job of creating a version of BASIC that would run on the then-new 6
      • almost everyone had MS BASIC on their 8 bit system, even Radio Shack and Atari.
    • Re:This is shameful (Score:5, Interesting)

      by TastyWords ( 640141 ) on Wednesday June 30, 2004 @10:30PM (#9578225)
      Why should you feel ashamed by hooking up again with a C-64? As lite as Linux has gotten, certainly you can find at least one flavor to satisfy your taste?

      I mean, come on, I remember when the TRaSh-80 was around and used a tape recorder for persisting data or TI-99/4A which you could be paid for $0.50 in its final days. It was selling for $49.50 at K-Mart and there was a $50 rebate from Texas Instruments.

      All of this is nicer unless you want to "adopt a mainframe" (someone begs & pleads for someone to come get a mainframe and give it a good home (usually basement or garage) before it's towed away. I think the CFO would not find the sharp spike in the electric bill very funny when she sees it, providing it doesn't blow something on the way to the house first.
      I'm guessing it would be in the neighborhood of contest to see whose houses stand the greatest chance of being seen from Jupiter. (In a recent year, one of the houses said their December bill was $5kUS more than average.
    • typical user session:

      **** COMMODORE 64 BASIC V2 ****

      64K RAM SYSTEM 38911 BASIC BYTES FREE

      READY.
      PLAY
      SYNTAX ERROR

      READY.
      PLAY *.MP3
      SYNTAX ERROR

      READY.
      LOAD *,8,1
  • Music CARRIER (Score:5, Informative)

    by Aliencow ( 653119 ) on Wednesday June 30, 2004 @09:39PM (#9577930) Homepage Journal
    The fPet is a music CARRIER..
    That reads like "Standard USB thumbdrive" to me, definitely not a player. I'd still get one because of the logo.
  • marketing ploy (Score:5, Insightful)

    by grahagre ( 459342 ) <greengr@NOsPAM.users.sourceforge.net> on Wednesday June 30, 2004 @09:40PM (#9577939) Homepage
    this is of course a marketing ploy to draw on the vintage name of commodore, and might i say a damn good one; if i didnt have an ipod i'd buy from them right away!
    • You're the only one (Score:5, Interesting)

      by MacFury ( 659201 ) <me@johnkramli c h .com> on Wednesday June 30, 2004 @09:42PM (#9577951) Homepage
      The name Commodore carries so little marketing power among non techies. Maybe the occasional person will remember using a commodore a long time ago, but most likely they will equate the name with old technology.

      • I'd say that it remains to be seen. I can see your point, but I also have to wonder if non-geeks might still have vauge memories of using commadore's as kids. They were pretty great for the time, kids are easily impressed anyway, and memories of our youth have a way of becoming inflated as time goes by. It's possible a twenty something could walk by, and be caught up on sight of the logo by vauge recolections of technology way ahead of its time.

        Or, as you say, they may not. I'd say there's at least a chan
      • What?? Did they also bring back Irving "The Ghoul" Gould and Medhi Ali? Those guys were real trailblazers. Not every pointyhair gets to buy the most cutting edge technology and then botch marketing, gag R&D, and then blame their own user base when they bail out on their golden parachutes.

        Anybody remember the "Omega RIPport", the satire newsletter on the death of Commodore wherein Ali gets lynched by members of a mysterious "Omega" group? Where Irving Gould swears to stamp out the Omega at any price
        • by Dasher42 ( 514179 ) on Wednesday June 30, 2004 @10:09PM (#9578105)
          I feel it necessary to say this: the way Commodore ran the Amiga into the ground made open source make a hell of a lot of sense. Amiga users, zealous as they were, were helpless to prevent the actual demise of their favorite platform.

          Linux gained a convert in me for its immunity to just this kind of thing. At least the open source community cares about its products.
          • by jazman ( 9111 )
            The Amiga was a great platform. Outpaced everything up to a 386, until the sheer force of MHz available in the 486 finally took the PC ahead.

            Commodore's response: let's put the same hardware in a smaller case, keeping the processor the same but requiring users to have to buy expensive 2.5" hard disks instead of the cheaper 3.5" drives.

            DOH! DOH! DOH! DOH! DOH! DOH! DOH! DOH!

            That was when I finally realised Commodore knew as much about marketing hardware as I know about the East China Tea Corporation. Th
          • by master_p ( 608214 ) on Thursday July 01, 2004 @07:27AM (#9580173)
            But the Amiga was about hardware; it could not be open source! No Amiga zealot would ever have the funds or the technological background to produce the next generation chipset that Amiga needed but in 90s. It's a totally different situation than software, where all one wants is an assembler/compiler and CPU emulator.

            Of course there are open source hardware projects, but nowhere as sophisticated as the Amiga hardware itself. Amiga emulators still can't play all the Amiga software, since the Amiga had a set of unrivalled custom chips that can't be emulated 100% by a PC (especially A1200 games).

            The problem with Commodore is that that they did everything they could to drive the Amiga off the market. In 1991, Commodore engineers had ready a prototype custom chip that could do 1,000,000 textured mapped polygons with hardware T&L. When the world was going 3d (in graphics), Commodore managers decided to scrap that chip and move on with CD32/1200/whatever instead. That was a major tactical mistake, which lead to the death of the Amiga in the following years.

            No open source developer could save the Amiga.
      • >The name Commodore carries so little marketing power among non techies.

        Umm, and your point? It has a lot of marketing power among techies. What's wrong with marketing something like this to techies?

        • by jimbolaya ( 526861 ) on Wednesday June 30, 2004 @10:11PM (#9578118) Homepage
          Nothing at all. But the remarkable thing about the iPod is its appeal among non-techies. The iPod really has become a cultural phenomenon much like the Walkman was decades ago.

          Commodore may sell a few music players to techies, but taking on Apple, it is not. I still get a chuckle out of the almost weekly reports of the next "iPod killer". This sort of press alone demonstrates the leadership of the iPod.

    • Re:marketing ploy (Score:3, Insightful)

      by ericdano ( 113424 )
      Its like the Napster name. I don't really see that making a big impact compared to iTunes......
      • I think the name Napster actually has a negative effect on them, because people go to get more free music and figure out they have to pay. "Hey, this is bullshit!!"

        iTunes on the other hand never was a place to get free music, so it doesn't have that negative vibe.
  • by vuvewux ( 792756 ) on Wednesday June 30, 2004 @09:40PM (#9577940)
    /(o^_^o)\
    • I hope they can play .SID files

      Screw that. It damn well better be able to play my MOD files! I have such classics as "Girl from Ipanima" and "All that She Wants" just waiting for a portable player! I mean, who *doesn't* want to listen to "Ace of Base" while out and about?

  • C64 (Score:5, Funny)

    by Not The Real Me ( 538784 ) on Wednesday June 30, 2004 @09:40PM (#9577945)
    But will it have 64 kilobytes of RAM?
  • name (Score:5, Insightful)

    by senatorpjt ( 709879 ) on Wednesday June 30, 2004 @09:41PM (#9577947)
    It's not Commodore, it's just the name.

    It's like if I started calling my garage Digital Equipment Corporation and started selling pet rocks, it doesn't have anything to do with a VAX.

    • Re:name (Score:5, Insightful)

      by H0NGK0NGPH00EY ( 210370 ) on Wednesday June 30, 2004 @09:53PM (#9578017) Homepage
      But it's no different than what "Napster" or "Atari" has done.
      • Re:name (Score:4, Interesting)

        by jimbolaya ( 526861 ) on Wednesday June 30, 2004 @10:21PM (#9578168) Homepage
        Or Apple, for that matter. The iPod doesn't run DOS 3.3 or ProDOS. Companies evolve...or they die. Interestingly, Commodore has seemed to have done one, and now is trying to do the other postmortem.
        • Re:name (Score:5, Informative)

          by BasilBrush ( 643681 ) on Wednesday June 30, 2004 @10:38PM (#9578253)
          You missed the point. Napster, Atari and Commodore are all companies that failed and then had their assets bought by other companies who now use the name purely for marketing purposes. They are not the companies they are pretending to be, although they do have the legal right to use the name. Apple doesn't fit that category.
    • It's like if I started calling my garage Digital Equipment Corporation and started selling pet rocks, it doesn't have anything to do with a VAX.

      Well, I'm using an Alpha processor as a paperweight, so you'd at least have a little brand recognition going into your venture ;-)
  • Apparently (Score:5, Funny)

    by entropy1980 ( 622108 ) on Wednesday June 30, 2004 @09:42PM (#9577955)
    there server is hosted on one of their mp3 players....
    • They found a use for some old inventory and are running their webserver on a C64 [c64.org].

      Interestingly, that's at least the second webserver to be made for a C64 - when I searched for it I was thinking of another one, which did not implement TCP/IP and had all the requests and responses sent over RS232 or something like that.

      Tim
  • Huh? (Score:5, Interesting)

    by MBCook ( 132727 ) <foobarsoft@foobarsoft.com> on Wednesday June 30, 2004 @09:43PM (#9577958) Homepage
    OK, I didn't own a Commodore, but I know the name. That said, can someone explain the logic behind this? If they made laptops, desktops, or even web-tv devices, I could understand. I could even sorta understand if they made TiVos. But MP3 players?

    This makes about as much sense to me as using the GE brand name to sell fresh carrots.

    And how in the world does the name eVic imply 20GB of storage? Is it something in another language (like vic means 20), or was the poster meaning that the eVic was supposed to compete with the iPod based on similarities in the way they are capitalized and the lengths of the name?

    None of this makes any sense. They should sell C64s today for hobbiesests and nostalgia. They could be very tiny, still use a TV, be tons of fun. Or make another hobbiest platform. But... MP3 players? Like the market needs more MP3 players.

    • Re:Huh? (Score:5, Informative)

      by dosius ( 230542 ) <bridget@buric.co> on Wednesday June 30, 2004 @09:47PM (#9577980) Journal
      One of their computers, the predecessor of the C64, was the "VIC-20".

      Moll.
    • Re:Huh? (Score:2, Informative)

      by Anonymous Coward
      And how in the world does the name eVic imply 20GB of storage? Is it something in another language (like vic means 20)

      One of the first widely successful Commodore computers sold was called the VIC-20 [oldcomputers.net].
    • Re:Huh? (Score:5, Informative)

      by NiceGeek ( 126629 ) on Wednesday June 30, 2004 @09:48PM (#9577988)
      Heres a hint...the full name of the VIC computer was the VIC-20.
      • Oh right. Like I said, I never owned a commodore. I'm 21 and I didn't get into computers untill I got an LCII 12 years ago. Thanks for the explanation.
      • Re:Huh? (Score:5, Insightful)

        by jimbolaya ( 526861 ) on Wednesday June 30, 2004 @10:18PM (#9578153) Homepage
        Commodore, it would seem, also needs a hint. "Cute" names that only a geek will get aren't like to sell a tremendous number of MP3 players. "iPod" struck me as an odd name, but Apple wasn't trying to be geek-cute when they chose that name. And they don't market the iPod as a geek toy, but as a hip accessory. Apple gets that music is about "cool" and "hip," and its obviously worked for them. Dell ("It's all about Cheap") and the rest of them either haven't learned this yet, or haven't been able to capitalize on it.
    • And how in the world does the name eVic imply 20GB of storage? Is it something in another language (like vic means 20), or was the poster meaning that the eVic was supposed to compete with the iPod based on similarities in the way they are capitalized and the lengths of the name?

      Once again google, if not memory, to the rescue: http://www.google.ca/search?q=vic20 [google.ca]

  • Great! (Score:5, Funny)

    by BobWeiner ( 83404 ) on Wednesday June 30, 2004 @09:43PM (#9577961) Homepage Journal
    Does that mean we'll get iTunes for C64s now?
  • by Xshare ( 762241 ) on Wednesday June 30, 2004 @09:44PM (#9577962) Homepage
    I wonder if the server is also a Commodore 64, slashdotted after 3 comments!
  • by YetAnotherName ( 168064 ) on Wednesday June 30, 2004 @09:44PM (#9577965) Homepage
    And all your base are belong to us, Slashdot editors!

    But on topic, I think this is great! Nothing quite like reviving an old computer brand name to rekindle the embers that we thought were long dead. I foresee that Atari will be back with their own portable media player; then we'll see the iAmiga, followed by the eAtari, followed by Apple's own iPod-GS, and then even IBM will join the fray with a portable player called the iPC-jr, complete with cooling fan and proprietary bus that won't take anyone else's add-on harddrive.

    Heck, I might even get big hair and a skinny tie, too!
  • by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday June 30, 2004 @09:44PM (#9577966)

    I find this really sad. Those products look terrible, and re-using the old commodore brands (Vic, PET) just makes it that much more sad. Though, it's not *that* sad, because Commodore stuff was never really that good (the Amiga had its moments though).

    They need to fire their copywriter ASAP, that's for sure:

    With this USB 2.0 data&music carrier you can easily extend your pc, notebook or mac with an extra storage harddisk.

    PC, notebook, or Mac? What if I have a Mac Notebook do I have to order two? Is it really a hard disk?

    The stick can be used for copying, store and move data...

    The English can be used for speak and write words!

    Exclusive Commodore design!

    Yes, we used both red *and* blue plastic on this bad boy! Ka-ching!

    you can enjoy listening hours and hours to all your favorite songs with just one battery!

    Wow, just one battery! Folks, portable music doesn't get any better than this. Hell, even my car works with just one battery!

    The player is including a neck cord,

    It's including a neck cord with what? Its tax forms?

    Just connect the camera to the docking, drag the made photos to the storage device and you can make new photos again!

    Hey, I hope nobody finds my maid photos.. my wife will kill me. I better not connect the camera to the docking as they suggest. And besides, when my memory card fills up, I do what any smart person does! I buy a new camera to hold more pictures!

    Beware the docking..

    • by Schlemphfer ( 556732 ) on Wednesday June 30, 2004 @10:09PM (#9578104) Homepage
      because Commodore stuff was never really that good (the Amiga had its moments though).

      Lord forgive me for jumping to the defense of a computer that's been dead nearly 20 years. But somebody's gotta answer this.

      I forget what Apple IIe's cost around 1985, but they were well over a grand; actually I think close to two grand...unreachable if you were a high school student mowing lawns. On the other hand, you could get a Commodore for $200, and a disk drive for another $200, plug it up to a TV and you were set.

      Additionally, the graphics and especially the sound were much better on the C64 than the Apple IIe. The Commodore had a SID chip, which was polyphonic (I think) and offered four different kinds of sound envelopes. You could even tweak the ADSR...all this on a computer that was released in, what, 1983? The Apples and their tinny speaker sure couldn't do that, not without some expensive add on sound card anyway.

      I remember a friend who lived down the block who had an Apple used to always be furious that the same games looked and sounded so much better on my cheap computer than his expensive one.

      I think for the time, Commodore made amazing hardware and practically gave it away relative to what others were charging. Really odd to see them dissed over something like this.

      • Price of Apple IIe (Score:5, Informative)

        by jimbolaya ( 526861 ) on Wednesday June 30, 2004 @11:43PM (#9578548) Homepage
        $1,395 [apple-history.com].

        What amazes me stayed at 1MHz, and was able to sell machines. The Apple I, released in 1976, was a 1MHz machine. The Apple II debuted in 1977, at 1MHz. The Apple II+ (my first computer, may God rest its soul) in '79, at 1MHz. The Apple IIe in '83, at 1MHz. The Apple IIc in '84, 1MHz. The Apple IIe Enhanced, at, you guessed it, 1MHz. That computer wasn't discontinued 'till 1993, for crying out loud.

        Mind you, the Apple IIc+, Apple IIGS, and Macintosh were introduced during that timeframe at higher clock rates, but still, for 17 years, they sold a machine at the same speed. What the hell happened to Moore's Law?

        • > Mind you, the Apple IIc+, Apple IIGS, and Macintosh were introduced during
          > that timeframe at higher clock rates, but still, for 17 years, they sold a machine
          > at the same speed. What the hell happened to Moore's Law?


          Moore's Law doesn't talk about clock speeds, it talks about complexity (or logic density). In the Apple II line you can observe it when it comes to RAM and ROM size:

          Apple I: 8 + 1 + 0.25 kB
          Apple II: 4 + 12 kB (max 64 + 12)
          Apple II+: 48 + 12 kB (max 64 + 12)
          Apple IIe: 64 + 16 kB
          App
      • by antibryce ( 124264 ) on Thursday July 01, 2004 @12:08AM (#9578654)
        The sid chip had three monophonic digital oscillators, individual envelopes, and an analog filter. Sometimes people used it to simulate polyphony but mostly it was used to make a full song (ie. 1 osc for drums, 1 for bass, 1 for lead)

        Some of the music composed on the C64 was amazingly complex given how limited it was. The C64 was also one of the first platforms used for "demos" (mostly in the form of crappy scrollers.)

        For those who really really love the sound of the SID chip there are lots of options to get it back. Most notably is the SidStation [sidstation.com] which is sadly no longer made and the HardSid. [hardsid.com]

        I also can't recommend Kohina [kohina.com] enough.
  • by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday June 30, 2004 @09:45PM (#9577971)
    ... a new venture from Jack Tramiel, assuming he's still alive, than someone who just bought or co-opted the Commodore names.

    Tramiel was a master, a guy who could read the market in real time and act quickly and ruthlessly. He was Commodore.
  • Hence the name?!? (Score:3, Interesting)

    by H0NGK0NGPH00EY ( 210370 ) on Wednesday June 30, 2004 @09:45PM (#9577972) Homepage
    The eVic is a 20GB (hence the name) hard drive-based player...

    Um, am I missing something here? How does the name eVic in any way imply 20GB of space???
  • by MMHere ( 145618 ) on Wednesday June 30, 2004 @09:45PM (#9577975)
    They bought the Commodore name some years ago and have just now revived it for an unrelated line of hardware.

    So this isn't really Commodore -- why should anyone care?
    • >So this isn't really Commodore -- why should anyone care?

      They shouldn't...but that's not going to stop unenlightened people from buying it because it has the Commodore name. And I doubt there are people who will make a point not to buy it because of the name. I don't see how the name could hurt them.

  • Bring me a handheld. (Score:5, Interesting)

    by JessLeah ( 625838 ) on Wednesday June 30, 2004 @09:47PM (#9577977)
    I want a handheld C64 system. No, not a Game Boy Advance emulating a C64. An actual handheld C64 gaming system. Maybe with a little keyboard a la the Zaurus. And I want it under $100.
  • by linzeal ( 197905 ) on Wednesday June 30, 2004 @09:48PM (#9577983) Journal
    Will it be able to play old C64 games as a bonus, and if not who is going to hack it so it can.
  • DOA (Score:2, Informative)

    by LqqkOut ( 767022 )
    Here's another short review from the folks at [austinv.com] and a pic [austinv.com]

    This one was /.'ed on the first reply!

    Maybe they should host their site on one of these [mini-itx.com] newfangled 933Mhz C64's

  • *checks calender* nope. Still has got to be someone's idea of a sick joke.
  • by deacon ( 40533 ) on Wednesday June 30, 2004 @09:52PM (#9578012) Journal
    From the corporate info [commodore.net] on the site:

    About Commodore International B.V.

    Commodore International B.V. is a daughter company of Tulip Computers. The CommodoreWorld concept is developed in cooperation with a number licensee-partners amongst others Yeahronimo N.V. and Ironstone Partners Ltd. Through this joint effort Tulip Computers and its partners will strengthen their power to act and will limit the financial risks connected to the development and production of new products considerably. In addition the introduction of new products and /or services will be much quicker.

    About Ironstone

    Ironstone Partners Ltd is a commercial vehicle created and funded by a number of individuals with a combined experience of over 100 years in the global games and media industries. Ironstone has offices in both the United Kingdom and Canada. Ironstone focus itself on projects in the worldwide games- and multimedia industry.

    ... Ironstone owns the intellectual property rights of a broad portfolio of games- and multimedia products....

    Commodore is a very strong brand with worldwide recognition introducing a solution what will bridge the consumer's eGap. An eGap is the entertainment Gap in the life of a consumer...

    Seems possible that some new people bought the rights to use the commodore name.

    And why is this corporate info written in Engrish?

  • It would help if they could keep their site up long enough to see the darn things. Are they running it on a Vic-20???

  • too late... (Score:3, Insightful)

    by mshultz ( 632780 ) on Wednesday June 30, 2004 @09:53PM (#9578016)

    I'm really surprised that they're introducing something like this, so late in the game. Sure, the market for digital music players may be growing fast, but there are a lot of others in this market, too.

    There doesn't seem to be any indication of price, but I think they're going to have a hard time grabbing any kind of market share at all unless these things are cheaper than air... since the feature list for the eVic [what kind of name is that, anyway?? short for Victrola?] looks fairly standard, they're going to have to compete mostly on price.

    One potentially useful feature would be the recording capabilities, assuming the interface allows live monitoring of levels. The specs mention bitrates for "music" and "voice" recording, but with a 20GB hard drive in there, it would seem reasonable to have the option to record uncompressed as well.

  • by spoco2 ( 322835 ) on Wednesday June 30, 2004 @09:53PM (#9578018)
    ...music like this [video-game-music.co.uk] and specifically these [video-game-music.co.uk], of which, of course, the format is the SID [tuwien.ac.at] :D

    Although you'd need something like this [sourceforge.net] to play them.

    And, just because I thought it interesting, apparently, these are the best ever C64 game tunes:
    * Monty on the Run
    * R-type
    * One Man and His Droid
    * Spellbound
    * Ocean Loader v3.0
    * After the War
    * Ghouls 'n' Ghosts
    * Kinetix
    * Auf Wiedersehen Monty
    * Bionic Commando
  • curious marketing (Score:5, Interesting)

    by pedantic bore ( 740196 ) on Wednesday June 30, 2004 @09:57PM (#9578037)
    The names "Vic" and "Pet" will resonate with former Commodore users, perhaps, but since these represent a tiny fraction of the market, I think it would have been in their best interest to choose names that had more "meaning" to a broader market. (looking at the eVIC, the name "iPodKnockoff" comes to mind, although this might get them in trouble).

    On a possibly unrelated note, I loved my Commodore 64 so of course I clicked on the link for "C64 DTV". This crashed my Mozilla. Since the people who hacked on old commodores are probably more likely to use Mozilla than IE, this worries me.

  • There should be a requirement that websites wanting to incorporate the word "World" in their name be able withstand (at the very least) a late-evening Slashdotting.

    The way their current bandwith tolerance looks, iTunes-level traffic would not only crash their server, but also burn down the office it's kept in.
  • Commodore lives? Holy crap.
  • by noewun ( 591275 ) on Wednesday June 30, 2004 @10:00PM (#9578050) Journal
    The mp3 player market is now a commodity market, which means the focus is of user friendliness and style, not features. There is precious little to choose between the various horizontally-opposed players; what sets the iPod apart is its style and its user interface. Your average consumer isn't going to care about the name Commodore. They will want to know whether the thing works and looks better than an iPod.
  • by jimbolaya ( 526861 ) on Wednesday June 30, 2004 @10:07PM (#9578088) Homepage
    First step to taking on Apple:

    Get a Slashdot-proof web site.

  • Pet? (Score:3, Interesting)

    by re-Verse ( 121709 ) on Wednesday June 30, 2004 @10:09PM (#9578102) Homepage Journal
    Wow.. I have an ipod.. .but for nostalia purposes alone, I'd use the Pet - back in early public school, monochromo monitors and all, I remember pets. We had two pets. Tape drives... and Games. I'd stay in from recess and develop my video game addiction on these things... Buying a pet will be like paying tribute to my first teacher in the school of geek.
  • by daemonenwind ( 178848 ) on Wednesday June 30, 2004 @10:10PM (#9578109)
    Commodore is a single entity under law. As a corporation, or more literally, as an "embodiment", it can sue and be sued, hold property and so on as a single legal entity.

    In other words, stop using the plural. It's just wrong. Commodore is not the Borg.
  • brand necrophilia (Score:3, Insightful)

    by bmarklein ( 24314 ) on Wednesday June 30, 2004 @10:11PM (#9578116)
    Just the latest example of brand necrophilia [livejournal.com].
  • in the same way that "Kaypro" says "FM receiver," "DEC Alpha" means "high quality headphones," and "TRS-80 ColorComputer" means "DVD player." But that's still less than "Cromeco" says "brick" or "Timex Sinclair" says "Doorstop."

  • I'm curious if these are even being made by Tulip, or if they're just placing the Commodore brand on some cheap Taiwanese imports.
  • by Hao Wu ( 652581 ) on Wednesday June 30, 2004 @10:14PM (#9578130) Homepage
    Even if Commodor does poorly, it will keep pressure on Apple to innovate and have fair pricing.

    And if Commodor beats out Apple, then good for them.

  • Roses on your piano

    or Tulips on your organ?

  • by MrLint ( 519792 ) on Wednesday June 30, 2004 @10:44PM (#9578283) Journal
    Sad indeed, so it looks by all accounts its using something from windows media player. and what looks like some thinly veiled OEM mp3 players. There seems to be a total lack of technical info on their 'music store', I suppose its now the current fad to throw up a web music store and sell some players and thru a brand name you bought at bankruptcy auction in order to generate some capital.

    Am I the only one that sees this as cynically as the rebirth of Atari?

    I think the most ironic part is that you need WMP (with optional Commodore skin) to play your purchase from the Commodore music store. I wonder if they have the Amiga version ready yet?
  • "At Last"? (Score:3, Funny)

    by afabbro ( 33948 ) on Wednesday June 30, 2004 @10:57PM (#9578331) Homepage
    "At Last"...like we've all been waiting ;)
  • Comment removed (Score:3, Insightful)

    by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Wednesday June 30, 2004 @11:02PM (#9578356)
    Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • by Sark666 ( 756464 ) on Thursday July 01, 2004 @12:15AM (#9578678)
    Getting nostalgic in my older years I found this site with a bunch of commodore commericals:

    http://www.commodorebillboard.de/Commercials/Com me rcials.htm

    But the one they're missing is the one with that jingle 'I'm playing games with my 64!'

    The reason I want that one is my friend was actually in that commerical and it would be cool to see it again.

  • For shame... (Score:3, Interesting)

    by keefey ( 571438 ) on Thursday July 01, 2004 @12:27AM (#9578724)
    As a long devout Commodore user, who had made his way through multiple C64s, and a huge array of Amigas, I find it almost criminal to view this new site. What next, are they going to release an "A-a-a-a-a-a-amiga"? (in the style of the ebay scam Powerbook thing). Not only is the grammar on that site shockingly bad, but the only thing on there that has ANY resemblence to the Commodore brand is a crappy joystick with 30 games that no-one would want to play. Where's Wizball? Where's The Last Ninja?

    So, basically, they are attempting to wipe out all of Commodore's history post-C64, and jumping straight to MP3. Why? Because they don't have the rights to the Amiga (thank god). Want to see what's happening with that little flagship? Go here [amiga.com] - a darn sight more interesting than that little bandwagon of naffness.

    I find it really depressing when some company buys a legacy name (such as Infrogrames did with Atari) and begins peddling merchanidise using that name, hoping for the retro-cool aura surrounding it to bring it sales.
  • I kinda hate this (Score:3, Insightful)

    by localman ( 111171 ) on Thursday July 01, 2004 @01:36AM (#9578932) Homepage
    I loved my C64 back in the day (even wrote some games for it back in the day [binadopta.com] (scroll all the way down)). I also did some 3D stuff on the Amiga 4000 with the video toaster. There really was a lot of fun to be had on those machines.

    But it kind of makes my skin crawl that a group of completely unrelated people are marketing completely unrelated stuff under the commodore name. I don't know exactly why it bothers me, but it does. Maybe because it's such a blatant attempt at manipulation?

    I don't know. But I sure loved the machines and software back in the day.

    Cheers.
    • Re:I kinda hate this (Score:3, Interesting)

      by Xyde ( 415798 )
      It's because they are cheapening your memories of Commodore by buying in bulk some crappy OEM'd mp3 players and sticking a commodore logo on them, then playing with your emotions in an attempt to profit from it. Yes my friends, it's okay to cry.

      No really, I'm not even that old (21) but I did have an A500, and I find this really disgusting as well. Even if they were selling something worthwhile I still wouldn't buy it out of principle.

  • by 3.5 stripes ( 578410 ) on Thursday July 01, 2004 @02:31AM (#9579199)
    Player Drive w/20GB 1.8"HDD, 1200mA Chargeable Nicole-Lithium Battery

    Nicole Lithium, hmmmm...

    if it's really white with red hair, I'm sold.
  • by rspress ( 623984 ) on Thursday July 01, 2004 @09:34AM (#9581191) Homepage
    Microsoft is releasing their own MP3 player. The basic case design may be familiar to iPod users but Microsoft has put their own spin on the controls and display.
    You can see it here
    http://rspress.home.comcast.net/Winpod.jpg

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