It's remarkable the episodes of The Computer Chronicles survived to this day, as back in their day, analog video tape was VERY expensive, so most TV station operations would reuse video tape from past TV productions for current projects. TV stations weren't known to be video archivists, as doing so would just add to the expense of operating a TV station, so scant videos of past TV shows were ever kept on the local levels.
Tramiel himself had little computer knowledge, but his super aggressive business tenets and ability to hire great talent made him essential to Commodore.
@@SteveLeicht1 I started out on Commodores in the late 70's. Trammel aggressive marketing of low cost computers was a major reason i was able to afford. 40 years later I am finishing my career as a software engineer. Thanks Jack, RIP
Tramiel was a business person who branched up from calculators, but he really had no vision beyond simplistic measures such as “how much RAM,” and “how many bytes on a floppy.” PCs and clones soon put his type out of business, because they gave all those decisions back to the consumer. You buy whatever RAM you need and snap it in place. You also choose whatever sound card you want, whatever video card you want, whatever modem or networking card, etc. The modular PC knocked him out, and video game consoles took away his toy market too. He thought he could keep foreigners out, meanwhile guys like Dell just got started assembling modular PCs…
I didn't appreciate this series enough "back in the day." This is such a rare treasure: intelligent conversation with no obnoxious talking heads asking the questions. And as so many have said before me "Hell Yeah! Gary Kildall!" Thank you so much for maintaining this very important channel!
Jack Trammel was a true visionary. He took the Atari brand from video gaming into true computing. At 10, I was lucky enough to have an Atari 800XL with the cassette tape drive thanks to my beloved grandparents, and it opened my eyes up to a much more broad world of computing that expanded over the years into experience with many low end, and midrange systems including Sun Sparc, DEC VAX, IBM AS/400, TANDEM to name a few. That would probably not have been possible without his vision, and my grandparents support. Thank you so much for preserving this priceless time capsule into the golden years of computing, before it became mainstream....
The part that gets me know is"live!"..... What, other locations offer DEAD strippers???? I know..... It means live/in person instead of via video or some other non-in-person mode. But that line has made me laugh for decades.
It's a lot more true today than it was back then. Look at the specs of the latest Macbook, you can easily get a more capable Windows laptop for a fraction of the price.
A low-end computer does not mean that it is an inferior model compared to the more expensive ones. A low-end computer may be used for performing one or only two application tasks. That is all what some users want. Not every computer operator or user needs a computer with big random accessed memory, many software programs, unless the operator plans to do heavy-duty business productivity. It seems as though the computer manufacturers were generous to make several computer models, instead of one specific computer for all users.
I remember a time when they didn't accept computer printed reports in my school. Eventually though they relented which was good for me cause my handwriting was (and still is) abysmal. I wrote a lot of reports on the C64 using Easyscript. (But that was a couple of years after this episode. In 1985 a C64 and printer was still out of my budget. (To put it into perspective a C64 starter package with cassette drive in 1985 cost more (taking inflation into account. Then a budget range gaming computer would set you back now. Especially since I'm from europe so C64's were priced a lot higher due to the customs import fees. When I finally saved enough to buy a C64 (either in 86 or 87) it cost me 600 dutch guilders and $1 was about 3,31 guilders back then, around $181 and by then it was priced a fair bit cheaper then it had been in 85)
Socialism high inflation, too much high Tax across the board always always contributes into higher inflation and lower productive economy.... Too bad Europe went that route but it's good for the Governments
@@Rickswars Socialism in the Netherlands? WTF are you talking about. At the time the Cristian party and the Liberal party had a joined government. Socialist parties were in the opposition. Even though they had more votes.
@Bruce S I'm not even sure he actually won the election in 2016 let alone the most recent one. Besides now the whole world thinks of America as being a joke of a democracy since he came to power.
@@raven4k998 in fact a friend of my did the very same to his sons 15 and 12 two weeks ago with C64, and the outcome was.... well, very like what you described... 😆
"A few years ago, the low end computer was promoted more for it's price than it's flexibility, more for entertainment than as a serious tool...but many owners of TWO THOUSAND DOLLAR computers might be surprised to see the inventive ways in which these INEXPENSIVE machines are used today" - 1985
I really love this show, and we owe much to Mr. Tramiel. I feel lucky I lived those years as a young boy..you could really understand and put your hands on these stuff, tinkering and play. Now tech seems so out of human comprehension. We mainly are just users of black boxes..Signed: an old chap :D
It was too slow because it was at half the speed of the z80 in the 128 to hold compatibility for the rest of the timings in the circuitry. Cpm was really just a last minute add-on, i.e. it's using a z80 for booting, so why not add something that will make use of this boot cpu.
I find it ironic, to see that Commodore LCD laptop. I didn't remember it at the time. To hear Bil Herd speak of it now (VCS shows et al) that the development of the 128 cost CBM that other device. Even with his role in the 128 he regrets his project killed the LCD portable.
@@robwebnoid5763 I think it was the other way around. They wanted CP/M capability as a selling point (Commodore was always looking for a way into the "serious" market, business computing, etc.) and then the presence of the Z80 turned out to be of great help in implementing C128's complicated boot-up scheme.
@@vcv6560 I believe it was also the technology and patents that Commodore sold off before any of it took off in any way. The justification was that the technology was ridiculous and never going to gain traction in the consumer industry.
Jack Tramiel was 30-40 years ahead of his time by trying to get Ataris in schools to hook the kids on his ecosystem. Google took a page from his playbook.
Atari ST 520 user interface is called GEM (Graphical Environment Manager). GEM was purchased from Digital Resource, that means from Gary Kildall himself, sitting on the other side of the table,
@@rabidbigdogThere’s even more to it than that! GEM already existed prior to the ST. Around the time the ST was being developed, DR was about to be sued by Apple for copying their work, so DR had to modify (and somewhat strip down) GEM to placate Apple. A team of programmers from Atari were separately working with DR on the version of GEM for the ST, and my understanding is that the ST version avoided the changes required by Apple.
I had admired how Jack Tramiel worked to make a more affordable powerful personal computer system. However I couldn't afford to buy an Atari 520ST at the time that Jack Tramiel's Atari was making the Atari 520ST. The Japanese computer business wanted to license their MSX format which most Americans had rejected during that time.
It should blow everybody's mind with what could be done with 64k of total memory (and a few custom chips). The C64 was truly the real star of 80's computing. Sidenote: Geos was some brilliant pre-MS office software in 64k if you thought the 64 was all games. (Have to also mention at the end of the decade, the Amiga ran circles around anything Apple or IBM had to offer). He labels himself unwittingly a computing dinosaur by his admission of focusing on Apple and IBM. Lucky for modern computing, the younger GenX computer nerds had a different vision.
The MSX didn't have a chance against low-cost C64s - so in spite of his 'curtness' he wasn't wrong. At least I'm still running on an Atari Computer in 2022 with the VCS on Ubuntu (it can run Windows too, I got it specifically to jump into Linux for a quarter the price of a Mac Mini with Ryzen CPUs - it's served me fine for a year - similar to the Steam Deck which I'm looking forward to).
The Atari ST was a good solid games machine- but the only serious alternative to IBM/ Compaq etc. and Apple at that point was the Amiga. The fact it all fell apart in 92-93 was the real tragedy. I suppose Windows 95 would have killed it off anyway, just as WinNT and then XP nearly killed off Apple until they refocused onto iPads and iPhones.
The ST and Amiga didn't have enough expansion potential, and video was baked onto the motherboard, instead of being on a card allowing for upgrades. For example, the ST's graphic resolution was no better than CGA, and stayed that way the whole time, even though PCs were at EGA (640×350) a year earlier, *and stayed there,* even though PCs moved to 640x480, 800x600, 1024x768, etc, etc.
@@RonJohn63 Yea, the great graphics of the original Amiga is ironically largely responsible for what killed it, spec wise at least. Tech grew fast and the Amigas poor flicker free resolution modes were shameful. Users wanted crisp sharp fonts, and 24 bit colors without trickery employed. Commodore didnt keep the amiga current and kept peddling what then became garbage specs. It's like if Apple still tried to sell the original ipad as hot new technology against everything else out there today - nobody would be fooled by such outlandish claims. Yet somehow Commodore was doing just that in the later years.
@@anonUK you must be a Amiga fanboy. In reality it was other way around, Amiga is not even close to ST in terms of general computing. ST is 10-20% faster, the workflow on ST is light years faster then on Amiga WB, ST having inexpensive 640x400 rock stable 72Hz razor sharp SM124 monitor for productivity apps which is Amiga lacking completely, and having floppy compatibility to DOS, while Amiga standing alone in the dark without means of communication to other business systems except the zero modem.
Interesting how Jack didn't have his crystal ball out to see how the Japanese would circumvent the home low-end PC market by taking the home gaming market directly. Ironic since Nintendo already had their 8 bit machine selling wildly in Japan during this time of filming and they would enter the US market with the same machine, just repackaged, not long after. Lost opportunity for an otherwise very good businessman of his time.
The console division was for several years in a legal limbo after the takeover, when things settled Nintendo already had cornered the market worldwide.
Jack left Commodore under bitter circumstances; it was run by the man who financed the business (Irving Gould), and Jack had major disagreements with him; Gould had no vision for the computer business. I’m pretty sure that one of Jack’s goals, when building the the Atari computer business, was to kill Commodore.
It may not be related but wouldn't the amiga ended up as an atari machine as they were there first and all the people who worked on it were ex atari engineers. Maybe if jack was still at commodore there might have been another in house developed 16bit computer, rather than something thrown together using off the shelf components, like the st.
Interestingly, Jack Tramiel knew next to nothing about computers, but did know a lot about aggressively running his business. Chuck Peddle designed the 6502 MOS chip. Also, Tramiel's son was an engineering whiz.
@@oldtwinsna8347 he had a mac briefly and praised it as the first computer he could use but he also got rid of it because they were a competitor. I've often wondered if that's how we ended up with the ST being so Macintosh like (the Jackintosh, as it was nick named).
see how gary was keen to chat with jack from the eager point of view of having his GEM os in the Atari ST being its selling point as a GUI ... listen to gary! to me it sounded like gary's hero was people like Jack, after all jack founded C= and then went to Atari.. and now Atari is still heard off compared to C= ... Jack Trammel was ahead of his time
6:26 It is at this moment that Kildall probes for a supply chain weakness to exploit. Jack cluelessly falls for it - or, perhaps being one step ahead fabricates his response.
My older brother, (13 mothes), Had a c64... so I had to one up him...so i bought a c 128. I never ran a c128 program on it. but i always ran it in the c64 mode. (it was actually a killer computer). But as a C64 it rocked!. a few months later.. they had the Amiga..... what the hell was that????
The US market was much different from the European at the time. Around '86 in the US the "low cost" PC and PC clones started to be dominant. In Europe the PC revolution really picked up the pace after the year 1990...That's why Tramiel was still selling tons of home computers in the late 80s in Europe.
Any comments here how the GUI of the Atari ST TOS is derived from GEM which was developed by Digital Research.... which was Gary Kildall’s company? Or was he not working there during these years at Computer Chronicles?
Atari sent a team of programmers (around a dozen, I think) to work at DR, so they could work with the DR developers on customising GEM for the ST. It’s not so much a derivation as a customised version. Gary Kildare was still running the DR business at that time.
So many on-point questions posed in this interview. Poor marketing and availability of the Atari ST in the US absolutely resulted in a low adoption rate compared to the Amiga or other systems. The inclusion of MIDI spread by word of mouth to music creators. I only saw one at the time at a near-to-college campus computer retailer.
Tramiel's sons are geniuses. Jack was fired from Commodore because he challenged Irving Gould, the financier behind the company, who was using Commodore like a personal ATM.
It was probably just that the rest of the computer industry was going by so fast with better machines. People were too wary of buying machines from Atari because of the company's legacy of being just an electronics toy maker, people want serious business machines.
@@Arcsecant aha, so it wasnt under-powered and overpriced designer piece? Do you realize that in 1985 Apple was pretty much a soulless megacorp you describe? They even streamlined and outsourced their production, laying off 1200 employees closing 6 manufacturing sites in US. Atari combined with Commodore where much smaller then Apple back then... In 1985 there was nothing charming on Apple IIe, it was terribly outdated. For the price you could already have Amiga or for the half the ST from Atari, both much much better choice...
Paul Schindler should be rather disappointed at all of his predictions that came wrong. Atari the one to upset IBM? Problem is that because the IBM PC was basically built from off-the-shelf parts, it was easy to copy. Just couldn't copy the BIOS chip. Atari's ST never had that same boost. Only one to get close was Apple's Macs and that only lasted a few years before Steve Jobs shut them down and focused on what he thought people wanted, which was the Internet.
The Japanese came in with the NES and Sega Genesis....Both were successful....not Atari Corp’s Atari 7800 or Atari XEGS......Still I think the 7800 and XEGS are great.....They have good games and good hardware....The XEGS was the Atari 5200 done right....
Well it was sort of true for the next 5 years for these 16 bit Atari computers they were successful, until ibm/intel kept creeping up to the 486 in the early 1990s, with more 3rd party software for that platform. And Windows 3x also.
I'm in the US. People did buy these newer Atari machines (both 8 & 16 bit, post 400 & 800) for it was the hype of a "new Atari" when Tramiei stepped on board. Yes it was niche, but still a lot of people bought them compared to before, especially fans of the old Atari. Not as big as Wintel & Commodore perhaps. As I said somewhere else, Atari couldn't really shake their past notoriety as an electronics toy/games maker. The hype trickled when perhaps 1990 arrived, along with the Intel 486 & Windows. The only Atari machine, which I still have, is a VCS (2600).
@@robwebnoid5763 there's no denying that it never came close to being as popular as the Mac (in the US). This, it "was a spectacularly poor prognostication".
I think all computers during this era is low end lol. . .I grew up on this stuff! I was 10 at the time! @3:51, I remember when I was a kid, I had to always run my 1541 floppy disk drive without the covers because it always overheated. The graphics capability and the SID 6581 MOS chip (Sound Interface Device) was this system's claim to fame in my opinion. But that 1541 drive sucked.
I enjoy watching these old episodes but have to admit the intro segment is bloody awful, surely they could have come up with something a bit more interesting
"What can I do with my 32K Z80 based glorified calculator?" Not a great deal... Pacman? Space Invaders? Give it to kids to play around with? At least the C64 was a decent enough machine to hang on for a couple more years- but 1985 was basically the end of the 8 bit and the beginning of the 16 bit era.
It depends on how you look at it. Like on the one hand, yes, the Amiga and Atari ST came out in 1985, Macintosh was already on the market, and the IIgs was coming up in '86, so comparing the 8-bit machines to what was available on the home market, the 8-bit machines looked very dated and under-performing by comparison. But on the other hand, I still used 8-bit machines. My school still used 8-bit machines (Apple IIs and a few Commodore 64s). My friends all still used 8-bit machines, up through about 1991 or so. There was better stuff out there but the old 8-bit platforms were still alive and well and processing words and running games and so on. The machines could keep doing the jobs they'd already been doing, as long as they didn't completely break down or something, and for a lot of us it was no small thing to think about moving to a completely different machine. So from my perspective the 8-bit machines weren't just "still around" they were pretty alive and well and still relevant. And for that matter, I owned a Commodore 128 - an 8-bit machine that didn't even come out until 1985. (My family also owned several Commodore 64s, including a 64C - a model that came out in 1986) In retrospect it probably wasn't a great idea to get the C-128, for what that machine cost, I could have got an Atari ST or an Amiga. Such is life... Consider - one of the most iconic games of the 8-bit era, Prince of Persia, didn't even come out until 1989. It got ported to just about everything but it started on the Apple II, well after the IIgs had come out.
How a computer can be just a toy? Because you can play games? It reminds me the time I was saying that I was using the Internet and they thought I was just watching porn. Now most of them are using the Internet just for porn and social media, while I'm making money out of it for years.
Poor Gary, he blew off ibm cuz be and his wife had plans that day and Bill gates swooped in and took the deal instead. But gates did give Gary the chance in the first place but Gary didn't see the urgency of the situation so Bill did. The worst part is that Gary's wife divorced him after that and he got in a bar fight and later died from injuries ex
@Andrew Tarrant no. Well at least not Gary's murderer. I've heard some stories about Bill though (well when I say stories I mean conspiracy theories lol)
Hooo boy did Schindler get his prediction wrong about the Computer Wars. For starters, neither Atari or Commodore really won, and IBM's architecture remained the standard in both business and home. Same with "Big Guy stands unaffected while the Little Guys fight," IBM hasn't sold a consumer product in over a decade now, and that department was in decline since the AT came out, while Apple stands alone as the last independent PC maker. And nothing has changed in almost 40 years: Apple is still underpowered, and overpriced.
Over thirty years later, our era would call the content of this episode "jacked up", partly because the low-end rigs of 2019 (like this 4GB Chromebook I'm using) would prove somewhat workable software development and music composition platforms. Another reason is that Gary Kildall, inventor of an early x86 OS (which got squished), was Chiefet's wingman here.
It's remarkable the episodes of The Computer Chronicles survived to this day, as back in their day, analog video tape was VERY expensive, so most TV station operations would reuse video tape from past TV productions for current projects.
TV stations weren't known to be video archivists, as doing so would just add to the expense of operating a TV station, so scant videos of past TV shows were ever kept on the local levels.
Jack Trammel was so under appreciated. He did more to make computers accessible in the 80’s than either Apple or IBM and the clones.
Tramiel himself had little computer knowledge, but his super aggressive business tenets and ability to hire great talent made him essential to Commodore.
@@SteveLeicht1
I started out on Commodores in the late 70's. Trammel aggressive marketing of low cost computers was a major reason i was able to afford. 40 years later I am finishing my career as a software engineer. Thanks Jack, RIP
@@charles-y2z6c Fantastic! Enjoy your retirement. I'm sure you'll still have plenty of fun with technology at the very least as a hobby.
@@SteveLeicht1
Thanks, I plan on it. Projects with no due date or anyone telling me how to do it, and whatever pleases my fancy.
Tramiel was a business person who branched up from calculators, but he really had no vision beyond simplistic measures such as “how much RAM,” and “how many bytes on a floppy.” PCs and clones soon put his type out of business, because they gave all those decisions back to the consumer. You buy whatever RAM you need and snap it in place. You also choose whatever sound card you want, whatever video card you want, whatever modem or networking card, etc. The modular PC knocked him out, and video game consoles took away his toy market too. He thought he could keep foreigners out, meanwhile guys like Dell just got started assembling modular PCs…
I didn't appreciate this series enough "back in the day." This is such a rare treasure: intelligent conversation with no obnoxious talking heads asking the questions. And as so many have said before me "Hell Yeah! Gary Kildall!" Thank you so much for maintaining this very important channel!
funny how 256k ram is now 512k l2 cache per cpu core now my how times they have a changed
We need something like this today to continue to document the modern age
Woz, Kildall, Tramiel, Bushnell, Jay Miner all inventors and innovators that don't get the recognition they deserve IMHO.
Woz has been overshadowed by Jobs, which is completely depressing.
They've all received lots of recognition.
@@RonJohn63 No where near the exposure of Gates, Jobs, etc. Killdall, Tramiel, etc don't get movies about them.
@@maxxdahl6062 they get recognition among geeks, and that's what matters... :D
@@RonJohn63 That's a good point. lol
Jack Trammel was a true visionary. He took the Atari brand from video gaming into true computing. At 10, I was lucky enough to have an Atari 800XL with the cassette tape drive thanks to my beloved grandparents, and it opened my eyes up to a much more broad world of computing that expanded over the years into experience with many low end, and midrange systems including Sun Sparc, DEC VAX, IBM AS/400, TANDEM to name a few. That would probably not have been possible without his vision, and my grandparents support. Thank you so much for preserving this priceless time capsule into the golden years of computing, before it became mainstream....
Man does that little theme bring back memories. I tried to never miss an episode. Thanks for putting this up!
you heard the woman it is no longer a toy
Vyvyan, you Basterd!
Bought a 130XE in 1985....started my Computer adventure that still goes on today!!!
The 'live erotic dancers' poster on 3:05 is priceless!
@ungratefulmetalpansy found the snow flake!
Yes it is
NUDE!
The part that gets me know is"live!"..... What, other locations offer DEAD strippers????
I know..... It means live/in person instead of via video or some other non-in-person mode.
But that line has made me laugh for decades.
In context, this poster was clearly intended as ironic/hipster in tone
Gotta love the preview of the TurboGrafx-16 Turbochip (or Hucard) in the Random Access news section.
Guy at 18:45 couldn't say it any better. Applies perfectly even 30 years later.
Hmmm... no.
It's a lot more true today than it was back then. Look at the specs of the latest Macbook, you can easily get a more capable Windows laptop for a fraction of the price.
@KMSMista
You sound like an Apple shill.
Do you ever consider other options?
Are you a democrat? LoL
A low-end computer does not mean that it is an inferior model compared to the more expensive ones. A low-end computer may be used for performing one or only two application tasks. That is all what some users want. Not every computer operator or user needs a computer with big random accessed memory, many software programs, unless the operator plans to do heavy-duty business productivity. It seems as though the computer manufacturers were generous to make several computer models, instead of one specific computer for all users.
Well said, something we don't see today.
I remember a time when they didn't accept computer printed reports in my school. Eventually though they relented which was good for me cause my handwriting was (and still is) abysmal. I wrote a lot of reports on the C64 using Easyscript. (But that was a couple of years after this episode. In 1985 a C64 and printer was still out of my budget. (To put it into perspective a C64 starter package with cassette drive in 1985 cost more (taking inflation into account. Then a budget range gaming computer would set you back now. Especially since I'm from europe so C64's were priced a lot higher due to the customs import fees. When I finally saved enough to buy a C64 (either in 86 or 87) it cost me 600 dutch guilders and $1 was about 3,31 guilders back then, around $181 and by then it was priced a fair bit cheaper then it had been in 85)
Socialism high inflation, too much high Tax across the board always always contributes into higher inflation and lower productive economy.... Too bad Europe went that route but it's good for the Governments
@@Rickswars Socialism in the Netherlands? WTF are you talking about. At the time the Cristian party and the Liberal party had a joined government. Socialist parties were in the opposition. Even though they had more votes.
@Bruce S I'm not even sure he actually won the election in 2016 let alone the most recent one. Besides now the whole world thinks of America as being a joke of a democracy since he came to power.
Can you please not type your UA-cam post but handwrite it? ;-)
@@DS-pk4eh lol
0:30 that's a Commodore Plus 4, mine still works fine, as does the C64, C128 and Amiga.
Low end in 1985 would magical in 1975.
try getting a kid to use one of those today and they will be like are you kidding me?
@@raven4k998 in fact a friend of my did the very same to his sons 15 and 12 two weeks ago with C64, and the outcome was....
well, very like what you described... 😆
18:44 This guy knew the truth, and to this day this is the truth!!
"A few years ago, the low end computer was promoted more for it's price than it's flexibility, more for entertainment than as a serious tool...but many owners of TWO THOUSAND DOLLAR computers might be surprised to see the inventive ways in which these INEXPENSIVE machines are used today" - 1985
$2000 in 1985 = ~$5700 today.
The inexpensive machines referred to are machines like the Commodore 64 which was $150 in 1985.
0:30 - Ah, good ol' Toys R Us computer aisle... good times.
I really love this show, and we owe much to Mr. Tramiel. I feel lucky I lived those years as a young boy..you could really understand and put your hands on these stuff, tinkering and play. Now tech seems so out of human comprehension. We mainly are just users of black boxes..Signed: an old chap :D
Drinking game: a drink every time you hear the word "sophisticated". Take that one step further and watch more Computer Chronicles.
Jack was a major force in the PC market. My ex boss worked for him in the Commodore days and has a ton of stories. He was way ahead of his time..
JT looks like the king pin from the old spider man toons
I imagined KIldall smirking at the fact of the C128's CP/M mode
Too bad the 128 was way too slow for CP/M to be very useful.
It was too slow because it was at half the speed of the z80 in the 128 to hold compatibility for the rest of the timings in the circuitry. Cpm was really just a last minute add-on, i.e. it's using a z80 for booting, so why not add something that will make use of this boot cpu.
I find it ironic, to see that Commodore LCD laptop. I didn't remember it at the time. To hear Bil Herd speak of it now (VCS shows et al) that the development of the 128 cost CBM that other device. Even with his role in the 128 he regrets his project killed the LCD portable.
@@robwebnoid5763 I think it was the other way around. They wanted CP/M capability as a selling point (Commodore was always looking for a way into the "serious" market, business computing, etc.) and then the presence of the Z80 turned out to be of great help in implementing C128's complicated boot-up scheme.
@@vcv6560 I believe it was also the technology and patents that Commodore sold off before any of it took off in any way. The justification was that the technology was ridiculous and never going to gain traction in the consumer industry.
"Apple computers are low powered and high priced"... and they still are! Funny how some things never change lol
Come on! 30 Gigas of Hard Drive for a laptop. That's Apple.
Apple computers were and are a lifestyle accesory, not a utilitarian device.
@Bruce S I prefer my Intel garbrage anytime.
Apple Silicon for the win
@@tomsmall1244 surprisingly yes.
Roasted apples at 18:42
Sick burn
"Keep those people out" amazing
Watching this today on my 6GB memory, 1TB HDD £299, DVD writer, Pentium quad core CPU, Wireless, etc... laptop computer...
I like stuff
Watching this on my personal workstation with 64GB memory, two 4TB SSDs, 24 core/32 thread i9 processor and a nVidia RTX 4070 lol.
Watching this on my 8/512gb M1 Macbook air lol
A Commodore Plus 4 in that opening shot.
I always liked the design of those.
Jack Tramiel was 30-40 years ahead of his time by trying to get Ataris in schools to hook the kids on his ecosystem. Google took a page from his playbook.
_Get a load of this slim documentation!_
LOL @ 3:04 Poster next to piano player reads "Live Exotic Dancers Nude" LOL great edit work
@ 18:45 And this is also applied today.
Yea this made me lol.
Atari ST 520 user interface is called GEM (Graphical Environment Manager). GEM was purchased from Digital Resource, that means from Gary Kildall himself, sitting on the other side of the table,
Remi's Classic Computers digital research.
That makes it all the more interesting that Kildall was Chiefet's wingman
It wasn't purchased 'from', it was developed with Atari.
@@rabidbigdogThere’s even more to it than that! GEM already existed prior to the ST. Around the time the ST was being developed, DR was about to be sued by Apple for copying their work, so DR had to modify (and somewhat strip down) GEM to placate Apple. A team of programmers from Atari were separately working with DR on the version of GEM for the ST, and my understanding is that the ST version avoided the changes required by Apple.
“And while Coleco, Mattel, TI, and Sinclair are all gone now...”
Me: “Toys R Us is gone too!”
Edit: “Whoop! And Kmart too!”
And Fry's Electronics in early 2021. And also RadioShack in mid 2017 (although there much fewer stores left).
TI is still alive, not making calculators anymore, but still here owned by Acer.
I had admired how Jack Tramiel worked to make a more affordable powerful personal computer system. However I couldn't afford to buy an Atari 520ST at the time that Jack Tramiel's Atari was making the Atari 520ST. The Japanese computer business wanted to license their MSX format which most Americans had rejected during that time.
It should blow everybody's mind with what could be done with 64k of total memory (and a few custom chips). The C64 was truly the real star of 80's computing. Sidenote: Geos was some brilliant pre-MS office software in 64k if you thought the 64 was all games. (Have to also mention at the end of the decade, the Amiga ran circles around anything Apple or IBM had to offer). He labels himself unwittingly a computing dinosaur by his admission of focusing on Apple and IBM. Lucky for modern computing, the younger GenX computer nerds had a different vision.
The 64 was the little engine that could. Fewer colors than an Atari, less prestige than Apple, but here we are!
Is Paul Schindler just ALWAYS wrong, or what?
The MSX didn't have a chance against low-cost C64s - so in spite of his 'curtness' he wasn't wrong. At least I'm still running on an Atari Computer in 2022 with the VCS on Ubuntu (it can run Windows too, I got it specifically to jump into Linux for a quarter the price of a Mac Mini with Ryzen CPUs - it's served me fine for a year - similar to the Steam Deck which I'm looking forward to).
Keep your eye on Atari..... up till 1996
16:34 this guy is so far ahead in his vision.
Video calling only needed a pandemic to become mainstream!
Kind of wish Atari ST computers where still being developed in the modern age. Give Apple and Microsoft more competition.
The Atari ST was a good solid games machine- but the only serious alternative to IBM/ Compaq etc. and Apple at that point was the Amiga. The fact it all fell apart in 92-93 was the real tragedy. I suppose Windows 95 would have killed it off anyway, just as WinNT and then XP nearly killed off Apple until they refocused onto iPads and iPhones.
@@anonUK AmigaOS is still around today. :) So is their own Architecture, I believe... :) It's being actively developed, last I checked. :)
The ST and Amiga didn't have enough expansion potential, and video was baked onto the motherboard, instead of being on a card allowing for upgrades. For example, the ST's graphic resolution was no better than CGA, and stayed that way the whole time, even though PCs were at EGA (640×350) a year earlier, *and stayed there,* even though PCs moved to 640x480, 800x600, 1024x768, etc, etc.
@@RonJohn63 Yea, the great graphics of the original Amiga is ironically largely responsible for what killed it, spec wise at least. Tech grew fast and the Amigas poor flicker free resolution modes were shameful. Users wanted crisp sharp fonts, and 24 bit colors without trickery employed. Commodore didnt keep the amiga current and kept peddling what then became garbage specs. It's like if Apple still tried to sell the original ipad as hot new technology against everything else out there today - nobody would be fooled by such outlandish claims. Yet somehow Commodore was doing just that in the later years.
@@anonUK you must be a Amiga fanboy. In reality it was other way around, Amiga is not even close to ST in terms of general computing. ST is 10-20% faster, the workflow on ST is light years faster then on Amiga WB, ST having inexpensive 640x400 rock stable 72Hz razor sharp SM124 monitor for productivity apps which is Amiga lacking completely, and having floppy compatibility to DOS, while Amiga standing alone in the dark without means of communication to other business systems except the zero modem.
Commodore FTW!!! 😍
Interesting how Jack didn't have his crystal ball out to see how the Japanese would circumvent the home low-end PC market by taking the home gaming market directly. Ironic since Nintendo already had their 8 bit machine selling wildly in Japan during this time of filming and they would enter the US market with the same machine, just repackaged, not long after. Lost opportunity for an otherwise very good businessman of his time.
shame they couldn't keep making awesome computers past the c64 and 128
@@raven4k998 what? The ST or Amiga was much more awesome then C64 and certainly more then C128.
@@raven4k998 They should have made the C65 instead of the silly TED family.
The console division was for several years in a legal limbo after the takeover, when things settled Nintendo already had cornered the market worldwide.
If only jack had stayed at the very company he founded...Commodore went into decline the moment he left.
Jack left Commodore under bitter circumstances; it was run by the man who financed the business (Irving Gould), and Jack had major disagreements with him; Gould had no vision for the computer business. I’m pretty sure that one of Jack’s goals, when building the the Atari computer business, was to kill Commodore.
It may not be related but wouldn't the amiga ended up as an atari machine as they were there first and all the people who worked on it were ex atari engineers. Maybe if jack was still at commodore there might have been another in house developed 16bit computer, rather than something thrown together using off the shelf components, like the st.
Interestingly, Jack Tramiel knew next to nothing about computers, but did know a lot about aggressively running his business. Chuck Peddle designed the 6502 MOS chip. Also, Tramiel's son was an engineering whiz.
One of Jack's last interviews states how he never even owned a computing device as a real user of such things until he got himself an iPad.
Like he said in this video, the kids that buy a commodore are getting ready for the pc in the future.
@@oldtwinsna8347 he had a mac briefly and praised it as the first computer he could use but he also got rid of it because they were a competitor. I've often wondered if that's how we ended up with the ST being so Macintosh like (the Jackintosh, as it was nick named).
This Jack reminds me Jack nickolson a little...
26:50 The future HuCard.
see how gary was keen to chat with jack from the eager point of view of having his GEM os in the Atari ST being its selling point as a GUI ... listen to gary! to me it sounded like gary's hero was people like Jack, after all jack founded C= and then went to Atari.. and now Atari is still heard off compared to C= ... Jack Trammel was ahead of his time
Thanks God that Jack ended up in America.
If He would stay somehow in Poland, the Commodore revolution would never happen, no doubts about it.
6:26 It is at this moment that Kildall probes for a supply chain weakness to exploit. Jack cluelessly falls for it - or, perhaps being one step ahead fabricates his response.
I love watching these and noticing how psychopathic Cheifet and Kildall really were. No wonder Cheifet eventually ended up "getting rid" of Kildall.
@4:27 Those are some nice quality printouts for 1985.
The way the page was coming out so fast and crooked made the whole thing seem very stages though.
looks like thermal sublimation print, still being used today...
24:37 Paul Schindler might have been wrong about a lot of things, but this time, he was right.
A BROKEN WATCH
IS RIGHT
TWICE A DAY
I owe 25+ years of programming career to C116, the lowest end of Commodore lineup, with 16k of RAM. I sometimes dream the world stayed 8 bits..
My older brother, (13 mothes), Had a c64... so I had to one up him...so i bought a c 128. I never ran a c128 program on it. but i always ran it in the c64 mode. (it was actually a killer computer). But as a C64 it rocked!. a few months later.. they had the Amiga..... what the hell was that????
18:45 - Almost four decades later, that's still true.
The US market was much different from the European at the time. Around '86 in the US the "low cost" PC and PC clones started to be dominant. In Europe the PC revolution really picked up the pace after the year 1990...That's why Tramiel was still selling tons of home computers in the late 80s in Europe.
Any comments here how the GUI of the Atari ST TOS is derived from GEM which was developed by Digital Research.... which was Gary Kildall’s company? Or was he not working there during these years at Computer Chronicles?
Gary appeared on Computer Chronicles on a pro-bono basis, i.e. he wasn't paid. He went to the studio on Saturday's for taping.
Atari sent a team of programmers (around a dozen, I think) to work at DR, so they could work with the DR developers on customising GEM for the ST. It’s not so much a derivation as a customised version. Gary Kildare was still running the DR business at that time.
Ti99 love ❤️
So many on-point questions posed in this interview. Poor marketing and availability of the Atari ST in the US absolutely resulted in a low adoption rate compared to the Amiga or other systems. The inclusion of MIDI spread by word of mouth to music creators. I only saw one at the time at a near-to-college campus computer retailer.
Jack put to much faith in his clueless sons and ended up in liquidation.
Tramiel's sons are geniuses. Jack was fired from Commodore because he challenged Irving Gould, the financier behind the company, who was using Commodore like a personal ATM.
Jack's sons > Irving Gould.
It was probably just that the rest of the computer industry was going by so fast with better machines. People were too wary of buying machines from Atari because of the company's legacy of being just an electronics toy maker, people want serious business machines.
@@SteveLeicht1 And to make matters worse he employed that grifter Mehed Ali.
@18:45 some things never change....
22:44 What is a yoot? 😄
Apple, underpowered and over priced, how true is that!
OMG, Jack Tramiel..
Question, did any of Paul Shindler's predictions came true?
With the right OS (Linux, *BSD, UNIX, etc.), you can do a TON with low-end Computers!..... :)
Commodore and Atari were the Google and Apple of their day.
..ehmm... Apple was Apple of the days of Atari and Commodore, dont you know? 😉
@@madigorfkgoogle9349 No, the charming Apple IIe I played with wasn't made by the soulless megacorp that Apple is today.
@@Arcsecant aha, so it wasnt under-powered and overpriced designer piece?
Do you realize that in 1985 Apple was pretty much a soulless megacorp you describe? They even streamlined and outsourced their production, laying off 1200 employees closing 6 manufacturing sites in US.
Atari combined with Commodore where much smaller then Apple back then...
In 1985 there was nothing charming on Apple IIe, it was terribly outdated. For the price you could already have Amiga or for the half the ST from Atari, both much much better choice...
Wow that map dude was intense. Any idea who it is? Maybe he founded Garmin the year after? 😄
It's interresting what you can do with low cost computers,wven to this day.
@Drew raspberry Pi enters the room...
i'm so glad Atari is the market leader today. Oh, wait....
4:02 he would have to change his underwear if he seen the online map products available today.
Paul Schindler should be rather disappointed at all of his predictions that came wrong.
Atari the one to upset IBM? Problem is that because the IBM PC was basically built from off-the-shelf parts, it was easy to copy. Just couldn't copy the BIOS chip.
Atari's ST never had that same boost. Only one to get close was Apple's Macs and that only lasted a few years before Steve Jobs shut them down and focused on what he thought people wanted, which was the Internet.
18:45 today is the same :D
I guess it's a shame that they eventually lost out.
The Japanese came in with the NES and Sega Genesis....Both were successful....not Atari Corp’s Atari 7800 or Atari XEGS......Still I think the 7800 and XEGS are great.....They have good games and good hardware....The XEGS was the Atari 5200 done right....
love this show!
18:45 I came for exactly this dude.
23:46 That was a spectacularly poor prognostication...
Well it was sort of true for the next 5 years for these 16 bit Atari computers they were successful, until ibm/intel kept creeping up to the 486 in the early 1990s, with more 3rd party software for that platform. And Windows 3x also.
@@robwebnoid5763 are you European? Because they were always niche in the USA.
I'm in the US. People did buy these newer Atari machines (both 8 & 16 bit, post 400 & 800) for it was the hype of a "new Atari" when Tramiei stepped on board. Yes it was niche, but still a lot of people bought them compared to before, especially fans of the old Atari. Not as big as Wintel & Commodore perhaps. As I said somewhere else, Atari couldn't really shake their past notoriety as an electronics toy/games maker. The hype trickled when perhaps 1990 arrived, along with the Intel 486 & Windows. The only Atari machine, which I still have, is a VCS (2600).
@@robwebnoid5763 there's no denying that it never came close to being as popular as the Mac (in the US). This, it "was a spectacularly poor prognostication".
COMODORE 64 FATHER RESPECT !!!
Jack Tramiel, słychać jego polski akcent.
1985: Atari or Commodore. Who will be left?
2022: who are they?
actually, Atari is still around, not so much Commodore...
I think all computers during this era is low end lol. . .I grew up on this stuff! I was 10 at the time!
@3:51, I remember when I was a kid, I had to always run my 1541 floppy disk drive without the covers because it always overheated. The graphics capability and the SID 6581 MOS chip (Sound Interface Device) was this system's claim to fame in my opinion. But that 1541 drive sucked.
I enjoy watching these old episodes but have to admit the intro segment is bloody awful, surely they could have come up with something a bit more interesting
I totally wanna learn about these exciting low end computers from 36 years ago... I might go out and buy one....
They are considerably more expensive today. Collector's items/museum specimens.
sorry apple no more back rubs.................lmao
It is true the Commodore64 was cheap to buy back then ... Everyone could afford the hardware. Games and software however ....thats another story.
"What can I do with my 32K Z80 based glorified calculator?"
Not a great deal... Pacman? Space Invaders? Give it to kids to play around with?
At least the C64 was a decent enough machine to hang on for a couple more years- but 1985 was basically the end of the 8 bit and the beginning of the 16 bit era.
I still my have c-64's. I also have typewriters, not to mention older PC's.
@@robwebnoid5763
Like I said, the C64 had the makings of a good computer, I.e. the Amiga 500. The Spectrum, older Commodores, TRS-80, etc. didn't.
It depends on how you look at it.
Like on the one hand, yes, the Amiga and Atari ST came out in 1985, Macintosh was already on the market, and the IIgs was coming up in '86, so comparing the 8-bit machines to what was available on the home market, the 8-bit machines looked very dated and under-performing by comparison.
But on the other hand, I still used 8-bit machines. My school still used 8-bit machines (Apple IIs and a few Commodore 64s). My friends all still used 8-bit machines, up through about 1991 or so. There was better stuff out there but the old 8-bit platforms were still alive and well and processing words and running games and so on. The machines could keep doing the jobs they'd already been doing, as long as they didn't completely break down or something, and for a lot of us it was no small thing to think about moving to a completely different machine. So from my perspective the 8-bit machines weren't just "still around" they were pretty alive and well and still relevant.
And for that matter, I owned a Commodore 128 - an 8-bit machine that didn't even come out until 1985. (My family also owned several Commodore 64s, including a 64C - a model that came out in 1986) In retrospect it probably wasn't a great idea to get the C-128, for what that machine cost, I could have got an Atari ST or an Amiga. Such is life...
Consider - one of the most iconic games of the 8-bit era, Prince of Persia, didn't even come out until 1989. It got ported to just about everything but it started on the Apple II, well after the IIgs had come out.
18:45 - still true today lol
How a computer can be just a toy? Because you can play games?
It reminds me the time I was saying that I was using the Internet and they thought I was just watching porn. Now most of them are using the Internet just for porn and social media, while I'm making money out of it for years.
Poor Gary, he blew off ibm cuz be and his wife had plans that day and Bill gates swooped in and took the deal instead. But gates did give Gary the chance in the first place but Gary didn't see the urgency of the situation so Bill did. The worst part is that Gary's wife divorced him after that and he got in a bar fight and later died from injuries ex
@Andrew Tarrant no. Well at least not Gary's murderer. I've heard some stories about Bill though (well when I say stories I mean conspiracy theories lol)
What do you mean "those people"
Yes....not very PC, but he was of another time.
It's kind of shite how they keep sandwiching Tremel with Commodore news.
13:00 Minutes in, Jack Tramiel enunciates what would become the future Gospel of the business world -- and the death knell of small business.
Commodore should have dominated the home and education markets with the Amiga. If the company weren't run by fools in the late '80s... 🤷♂
I guess apple didn't change much.
Apple isn’t about having the most powerful computers. It’s all about having the best user interface. It’s the easiest to use.
Just intonation? Interesting...
at 7:17 you know this guy was outsourcing USA jobs to sweat shops.
Jackintosh 😂✌
Hooo boy did Schindler get his prediction wrong about the Computer Wars.
For starters, neither Atari or Commodore really won, and IBM's architecture remained the standard in both business and home.
Same with "Big Guy stands unaffected while the Little Guys fight," IBM hasn't sold a consumer product in over a decade now, and that department was in decline since the AT came out, while Apple stands alone as the last independent PC maker.
And nothing has changed in almost 40 years: Apple is still underpowered, and overpriced.
actually, did ever Schindler predict something spot on?
Oh, if only ditching copy protection actually really caught on and just kept going to the modern day, we could have avoided all the DRM bullshit...
Over thirty years later, our era would call the content of this episode "jacked up", partly because the low-end rigs of 2019 (like this 4GB Chromebook I'm using) would prove somewhat workable software development and music composition platforms. Another reason is that Gary Kildall, inventor of an early x86 OS (which got squished), was Chiefet's wingman here.
14:36 Who is that???