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The A3000 being exhibited has a 68040 25 MHz. CPU, OS 3.1, and ZorRAM which ups the Fast RAM another 256K!. A3000 courtesy of Robert Bernardo (Photo of Richard G.'s A3000)
This accelerated A1200 sports an accelerator, plenty of Fast RAM, and OS 3.1. A1200 courtesy of Marc Rifkin
Up for display is the new A.L.I.C.E. (A Laptop Incorporating a Classic Experience) laptop which runs AmiKit X and Amiga OS 4.1 Final Edition, update 1. See the unboxing here: http://blog.retro-link.com/2017/10/unboxing-alice-laptop-incorporating.html
The one that began the Amiga series of computers! The A1000 has a Kickstart 2.04 ROM, OS 2.1, 512K of Chip RAM, and 1.5 meg of Slow RAM. A1000 courtesy of Mario Luppi
Wowie! On exhibit will be an Amiga 500 Plus with an ACA500+ accelerator, 8 megs of RAM, and a SD/CF combo. Then there is the Amiga 1200 with a super rare Vampire 1200 accelerator plus other stuff. Acceleration Amigas courtesy of Lazlo K.
Here is a modestly-upgraded A600 with OS 3.2, 2 meg of Chip RAM, 2 gig of PCMCIA RAM, and an 8 gig CF hard drive. A600 courtesy of Robert Bernardo
A big-box computer, this A2000 has a hard drive with OS 3.1, 2 megs of Fast RAM, and other app goodness! A2000 courtesy of Mario Luppi
This is the last product to come out of Commodore Business Machines. The CD32 was advertised as the first 32-bit game console. CD32 courtesy of Matt Brewster
Marc brings his A1200 a TurboFire 1260, A1200.net black case, and Amiga OS 3.1.4.
He also has the Checkmate Mini case with Edu Ararana’s MistiX board and a C128 with the RetroTINK-5X Pro video converter.
Before the C64, the VIC-20 was the multi-million seller. This VIC comes with a 35K switchable RAM expansion with integrated SD2IEC from Melbourne Console Reproductions. VIC-20 courtesy of Robert Bernardo
From SC3videogames.com, Steven Hertz appears with his breadbox C64 set-up plus a MiSTer set-up.
This beauty comes courtesy of Mario Luppi
These transportable SX-64's are courtesy of Lenard Roach of Kansas City, KS!
The Ultimate 64 is a new motherboard which recreates the Commodore 64, the computer which put CBM on the map! This U64 comes in a new Kickstarter C64C case and has a MechBoard64 with its Cherry Blue microswitches. U64 courtesy of the late Bogdan Macri of the Southern California Commodore & Amiga Network
This Plus/4 is with a Commodore 1551 drive. Plus/4 courtesy of Robert Bernardo
This PET 2001-8 has a custom adapter board that is configurable to replace RAM/ROM and allow emulation of later models with more memory and later Commodore BASIC versions. Also has a SD/internet storage device for quick loading of software, a homemade audio board, and a joystick for gaming! PET 2001 by Jim DiNunzio
The updated version of the flat C128, this DCR will come with a CMD RAMLink v1 and a SD2IEC card drive. C128DCR courtesy of Mario Luppi
Try your gaming hands at various C64, VIC-20, and Amiga games running off of MiST boxes! The plans are to have four boxes with four monitors – one box running C64 games, one box running Amiga games, and in honor of the 40th anniversary of the VIC-20, two boxes running VIC games. MiST boxes courtesy of Matt Brewster
Jerold Kress shows off his C64 outfitted with Cynthcart, midi interface, and full-size synthesizer keyboard.
Check out the various Ray Carlsen power supplies powering the Commodores 8-bit and desktop Amigas computers, including a new, custom p.s. that can run a C64/C128/VIC-20CR at the same time as a C16 along with two 1541-II/1581 disk drives OR run an Amiga 500/600/1200!
Page through this latest book from Fresno Commodore User Group newsletter editor, Lenard Roach!