![]() ![]() Since then, the Amiga brand has been passed from company to company, with little success, until reaching the hands of "Gateway", who seem more interested in making Amiga servers than home computers. "Commodore" couldn't meet the competition from the consoles and advancing PC technology, and went bankrupt in 1993. More machines followed, including the ill-fated A500+ and A1200, and the disastrous CD32. ![]() ![]() However, the smaller and more compact Amiga 500 was a huge hit, thanks to mass developer support and the excellent freeware/demo scene. The original machine, the Amiga 1000, was released in 1985, to mixed response. A big step up from the 8-bit machines, it could be used for word-processing, music tracking, graphics design, and (best of all!) playing some of the best games ever written. The Commodore Amiga was probably the most popular home computer of the late 80s-early 90s, being a precusor to the modern PC. ![]()
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