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The VIC-20 was intended to be more of a low-end home computer than the PET. Reportedly, the VIC-20's video chip was intended for use in inexpensive display terminals and game consoles, but Commodore couldn't find a market for the chip. At the same time, Commodore had an oversupply of 1K RAM chips. In April 1980, Commodore president Jack Tramiel ordered the development of a computer that could sell for under $300 US. What had been an oversupply of parts became the VIC-20. While the PET was sold through authorized dealers, the VIC-20 primarily sold at retail, especially discount and toy stores, where it could compete more directly with game consoles. Commodore took out advertisements featuring actor William Shatner of Star Trek fame as its spokesman, asking, "Why buy just a video game?".
Although the VIC-20 was criticized in print as being underpowered, the strategy worked: it became the first computer to sell more than 1 million units and was the best-selling computer of 1982. At its peak, 9,000 units per day were produced, and a total of 2.5 million units were sold before it was discontinued in January 19851985 is a common year starting on Tuesday. Events January events January 1 Creation of the Internet's Domain Name System. January 17 British Telecom annouces they are going to abolish the famous red telephone boxes. January 23 A debate in the House of Lor, when Commodore repositioned the C64 as its entry-level computer due to the forthcoming release of the C128The Commodore 128 is a home/ personal computer, also known as the C128 . It was Commodore Business Machines (CBM)'s last commercially released 8-bit machine. Introduced in January of 1985 at the CES in Las Vegas, it appeared three years after its predeces and Amiga (the latter taking Commodore into the 16-bitIn computer science, 16-bit is an adjective used to describe integers that are at most two bytes wide, or to describe CPU architectures based on registers, address buses, or data buses of that size. Prominent 16-bit processors include the Intel 8086, Inte world).
Because of its small memory and low-resolution display compared to some other computers of the time, the VIC-20 was primarily used for educational software and games. However, productivity applications such as home finance programs, spreadsheets, and communication terminal programs were also made for the machine. Its high accessibility to the general public meant that quite a few software developers-to-be cut their teeth on the VIC-20, being introduced to BASIC programming, and in some cases going further to learn assemblyAssembly language or simply assembly is a human-readable notation for the machine language that a specific computer architecture uses. Machine language, a pattern of bits encoding machine operations, is made readable by replacing the raw values with symbo or machine languageA system of codes directly understandable by a computer's CPU is termed this CPU's native or machine language . Although machine code may seem similar to assembly language they are in fact two different types of languages. Assembly code consists of both b. Several magazines sold on newsstands offered type-in programA type-in program or just type-in is a computer program listing printed in a computer magazine or book, meant to be typed in by the reader in order to run the program on a computer. Type-ins were very common in the early home computer era of the late 1970s for the VIC-20, including one published by Commodore itself. Many VIC users learned to program by entering, studying, running, and modifying these type-ins.
The ease of programming the VIC and availability of an inexpensive modem combined to give the VIC a sizeable library of public domain and freeware software, although much smaller than that of the C64. This software was distributed on online service s such as CompuServe, BBSs, and via user groups.
As for commercial software offerings, an estimated 300 titles were available on cartridge, and another 500+ titles were available on tape. By comparison, the Atari 2600, the most popular of the game consoles, had a library of about 900 titles.