Commodore 64 - Clones And More
The Commodore 64 was absent from the market for a good ten decades before resurfacing in the middle of 2004. The brand owners of the Commodore right from the year 2007, who were also manufacturers of personal computers known as Tulip Computers BV, announced the re-introduction of the Commodore 64 directly connectable to the TV - the C64DTV. The TV game was maneuvered on a joystick extension of the C64, with ROM empowered with more than thirty games that were built in. Designer of the C64, Jeri Ellsworth, was a designer of computers who had learnt everything on his own.
He was the person responsible for earlier designing the C One C64. The various types of mini consoles displayed a similar concept as used in the C64DTV, based on Intellivision as well as Atari 2600. During the decade, both gained success that was truly modest. The Commodore 64's full capabilities were seen in the product keyboard, floppy disk drive, second joystick and also hard drive installed. In the USA this product was advertised well on the QVC rostrum.
In Hummer, the mini game and the console, hardware of the DTV was used before being sold at RadioShack in the middle of 2005. Enthusiasts of the C64 have taken great interest in developing hardware that is new and inclusive of the Ethernet cards, interfaces with Flash cards and hard disks that was adapted in a special manner. The Commodore trademark was licensed by Commodore USA, which in May 2011 released a branded PC called the Commodore 64. It was on the architecture of the X86 that the C64 was based and thus it had many similarities to the C64.

The new re-introduction of the Commodore 64 is as a spec computer of the net top types that comes with a Blu-ray player or DVD built in and optional,.8Ghz 64-bit dual core D525 Atom processor, Hard Disk, Nvidia ION2, onboard graphics and also e WiFi. It is with the Ubuntu 10.10 Desktop Edition that it becomes even more coveted and envied. The Commodore OS a derivative from Linux was developed by Commodore USA additionally. It was earlier planned to ship the product as part of a package that flaunted classical games. In the original C64 there was no hardware compatibility. Though, the emulator used provided lots of compatibility with the software.
When the C64 was introduced, the Atari 8 bit family was the main rival to challenge the capabilities of sound as well as graphics of the Commodore. Demoscene subculture started with the introduction of the C64. For music especially, the C64 continues to be used as a demo machine even till today. Its unique software which was established in 1982 makes it a strong competitor to newly introduced gaming consoles as well. The rivals have since grown and so have the upgrades made to the commodore. It is now common observance to identify a cult sort of culture developing around the computer, games and features, making it large for the market itself. One thing that however is beyond compare is the fact that the Commodore 64 isn't here for competition and in that aspect remains independent of market pressures.
