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  1. Commodore International Corporation[ a ] was a home computer and electronics manufacturer incorporated in The Bahamas with executive offices in the United States founded in 1976 by Jack Tramiel and Irving Gould. Commodore International (CI), along with its subsidiary Commodore Business Machines (CBM), was a significant participant in the ...

    • Flukes and Good Fortune
    • Looking For Inspiration
    • Right Place, Right Time
    • Commodore’s Origins
    • Commodore 64 and The Amiga
    • Selling Dreams, Not Computers
    • A Huge Bundle of Results

    ‘My first job was with the business division, selling Commodore PETs into retail,’ Pleasance says. ‘My background has always been in retail. But they took me away from that role... the C64 was doing insane business. So, I got the job of national accounts manager for C64, looking after all the big guys: Dixons, Comet, Currys... Right from the start ...

    In his early years, Pleasance worked in Australia but decided, in 1983, to come back home to the UK. On the way, he travelled the world, looking around for what might be the ‘next big thing’. The tour forced him, inexorably, toward a conclusion: home computing was going to be huge. And so, he focused on finding a job in the computer industry back i...

    ‘I arrived at the building and as I was entering, a lady was leaving. So, I held the door for her. I remember it distinctly,’ Pleasance continues. ‘So, I had the interview with the guy and he said: “Well, Mister Pleasance, there is no doubt that you could do this job standing on your head. But, I’m not going to put you forward for it. You’ve got re...

    Much of Commodore’s early success, Pleasance says, can be ascribed to its founder: Jack Tramiel. Born in 1928, Tramiel was - according to Pleasance - quite a formidable man but some redemption came in the form of having his finger firmly on the public’s collective pulse. ‘He knew what trends were happening,’ Pleasance says. ‘He was always investiga...

    By the late eighties, the 8-bit Commodore 64 was starting to show its age and was running out steam. The problem was, the 16-bit Amiga, a machine that would eventually surpass the C64’s success, was still in the late stages of gestation. ‘Amiga wasn’t powerful enough to be a serious business machine,’ Pleasance recalls. ‘It didn’t have enough serio...

    The MD told Pleasance that if he could, he would fire him. But, because he didn’t have an easy replacement, the salesman and marketing man could stay. Reluctantly. ‘He spent 20 minutes lecturing me about ethics,’ Pleasance recounts. ‘After all that I said: “Fine. Okay. I’ll make a deal with you.” He said, “you’re in no position to make a deal with ...

    The Commodore team put the plan into action, basing the first bundle around Batman the Movie. The game was going to be created by Ocean software, after it had paid one million dollars for the licence to use the name. ‘I went to Ocean and met up with David Ward and Jon Woods. I said “I’m going to put a proposition to you. You’ll either have the ball...

    • David John Pleasance
  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Jack_TramielJack Tramiel - Wikipedia

    Children. 3. Jack Tramiel (/ trəˈmɛl / trə-MEL; born Idek Trzmiel; December 13, 1928 – April 8, 2012) was a Polish-American businessman and Holocaust survivor, best known for founding Commodore International. [ 3 ] The Commodore PET, VIC-20, and Commodore 64 are some home computers produced while he was running the company.

  3. The Commodore International Historical Society aims to preserve as much of Commodore International’s history as possible. This includes scanning and archiving company documents, interviewing former staff members and preserving products made by the company.

  4. Commodore, the commonly used name for Commodore International, was a US electronics company based in West Chester, Pennsylvania which played a vital role in the development of the home–personal computer industry in the 1980s. The company is also known under the name of its R&D operation, Commodore Business Machines (CBM).

  5. Jul 31, 2012 · The $595 (£399) device took its name from its US maker, Commodore International, and the fact it had 64 kilobytes of RAM memory. ... at a primary school and secondary school in London. Video ...

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  7. Feb 14, 2023 · Commodore “Vixen” History. Drawing from a number of sources including Brian Bagnall’s Commodore: A Company on the Edge, internal documents provided by Michael Tomczyk, various discussions in the Commodore International Historical Society Facebook group, and a litany... 0. Documents.

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