Here it is… the latest… the greatest (well, one of them)… it's a production AmigaOne A1222+ running OS 4.1 Final Edition and Enhancer 2.2! See how it handles new OS 4.1 apps and classic Amiga games/demos/music. A1222+ courtesy of Robert Bernardo
This A3000 has the 68030 processor running at 25 MHz, OS 3.1, Spectrum 24-bit video card, a 4 gig CF card drive via Zulu SCSI, and 256 meg of Fast RAM via a ZorRam card. A3000 courtesy of Robert Bernardo
Rob Barlow brings these machines connected to color printers!
The A1200 being exhibited has a 68040 25 MHz. CPU, OS 3.9, 2 megs Chip RAM, 64 megs Fast RAM, 16 gig CF hard drive, and Arcade Game Selector II. A1200 courtesy of Robert Bernardo
Another A1000? No, this is not an ordinary A1000 but one with the Apollo Firebird accelerator which is 320x faster than a standard Amiga 600! The Firebird also gives the computer 512 gigs of RAM (shared by Fast, Chip, etc.), AGA, HDMI, Coffin OS r63 (based on Amiga OS 3.9), Apollo core, and Kickstart 3.10! A1000 courtesy of Robert Bernardo
Again… another A1000?! But this one is special because it has a Parceiro II which gives Fast RAM, microSD card storage, a clock, and the option of having several Kickstarts. A1000 courtesy of Alex Smith. See Alex talking about it and his C64 at https://youtu.be/Lxcuf-a9PSk
From Retro Games Ltd. of England comes THEA500 (Mini) which looks like a miniature Amiga 500 but has the power of an Amiga 1200. Not only does it have 25 games built into the system, it is running the Aminimiga distribution give the Mini an Amiga desktop. THEA500 Mini courtesy of Robert Bernardo
Travis Smith will awe you with his creation, the TeensyROM, connected to a C64! He'll have a MIDI keyboard connected to it and a Wi-Fi Ethernet bridge to try to connect in the venue's wi-fi. Watch as Katie S. tries out her Akai MIDI wind instrument with the TeensyROM running Cynthcart - https://youtu.be/LGf2gu9HwaM Then watch as Katie S. on the MIDI wind instrument and Devon A. on the MIDI keyboard give an impromptu concert with 2 C64's, 2 TeensyROM's, and 2 Cynthcart programs running - https://youtu.be/YBq7wSv3XT0
See the C16 in action with the latest games and a ReSeed cartridge providing SID music! C16 courtesy of Steve Guidi
The Mega65 is the modern replica to the mythical Commodore 65 which was never publicly released. The Mega65 has a full keyboard, C65 and C64 modes, a built-in 3 1/2“ floppy drive, HDMI out, a SD card slot, and acceleration up to 40 MHz.. Mega65 courtesy of Dan Sanderson. Check out Katie S. unboxing a Mega65 at the show - https://youtu.be/HYT8zUi7axQ
Not just an ordinary Commodore 64 in a breadbox, this is the Ultimate 64, a redesigned C64 made of modern components. See https://ultimate64.com This U64 comes in a new Kickstarter C64C case and has a MechBoard 64 with its Cherry Blue microswitches. U64 courtesy of the late Bogdan Macri of the Southern California Commodore & Amiga Network
Before the C64, the VIC-20 was Commodore Business Machines' sales leader. This VIC-20 sports a SD2IEC with switchable RAM expansion. VIC-20 courtesy of Robert Bernardo
Connected to a C64, see this rare musical keyboard and its software, Poly64, in action! Wersiboard keyboard courtesy of Luca. Alongside his keyboard will be the Tech Sketch Music Port keyboard! Music Port courtesy of Robert Bernardo
Oooo, a PC running DOS 6.01 with 640K of RAM, 9.54 MHz. speed, and NEC V20! Yeah, CBM was into selling PC's, too. This one has its mechanical hard drive replaced with a CF card, and it has a composite-to-VGA card and Snark Barker (SoundBlaster clone), too. PC20-III courtesy of Robert Bernardo
From Tynemouth Software comes the Mini PET 40, a board that re-creates a Commodore 40-column PET computer! Use programs that range from the PET 2001 to the PET 4032! The Mini PET comes with composite input, uses a common wall-wart power supply, and is usable with a SD2PET. Mini PET 40 courtesy of Robert Bernardo
Ryan Sherwood of the Puget Sound Commodore User Group brings over his Akai MIDI keyboard and will try it out with the C64 and TeensyROM running Cynthcart. See him speak about it at https://youtu.be/yykxoTL-PgI
For display only, take a look at this rare machine. C64GS courtesy of Robert Bernardo