In 1982, Commodore UK was planning a full range of home microcomputers to meet every budget. The VIC-20 was a success, and they wanted to add a VIC-10 at an even lower price point, and a 16K VIC-30 to sit below the upcoming top-end VIC-40, CBM-64 or VIC-64, which ended up being called the Commodore 64. But rapidly changing market conditions, led by the release of the ZX Spectrum, meant there was ultimately no place for the VIC-10 (aka Ultimax or Commodore Max Machine) in the UK, and the VIC-30 was quietly shelved. We'll look through several UK-based Commodore magazines from 1982 to figure out the story behind these little-known computers that were cancelled, relegating the Commodore VIC-30 to vapourware and the Commodore VIC-10 / MAX to only the Japanese market.
Update: VIC-30 listed in a Commodore 1982-04-30 Hardware Status Report document contributed by Michael Tomczyk: archive.org/de...
Huge thanks to Darren Foulds of Groo Tube for the artist's impressions of the VIC-30: / grootube
Commodore International Historical Society: commodore.inte...
Secret Weapons of Commodore: www.floodgap.c...
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Magazines referenced:
archive.org/de...
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Index:
0:00 The VIC-20 is a second-rate computer?
1:10 Your Computer: Commodore blitz market with Vic-10, Vic-30, C-64
6:55 VIC Computing: Whither Vic?
9:44 Popular Computing Weekly: Vic-10 and Vic-30 at Hanover Fair
11:44 Vic-30 discreetly shelved
13:58 Why was the VIC-30 cancelled?
17:32 Thanks!
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