No, the Commodore 64 was not the first home computer. The first widely successful home computer was the Commodore PET, which was released in 1977.
A MOS 6510 microprocessor
The Commodore 64 is the best-selling single personal computer model of all time. Released in August 1982 by Commodore Business Machines, the Commodore 64 is commonly referred to as the C64 and occasionally known as CBM 64 (its model designation) or C-64. Introduced by Commodore Business Machines in August 1982 at a price of US$595 (then later reduced to US$200 in late 1983), it offered 64 kilobytes of RAM with sound and graphics performance that were superior to IBM-compatible computers of that time. During the Commodore 64's lifetime (between 1982 and 1994), sales totaled around 17 million units.
The Commodore 64 was equipped with 64 kilobytes (KB) or 65536 bytes of memory (64*1024). It was possible to expand this memory with a memory expansion plugged in the back although the 6510 CPU could only address 64 kb so these had methods for copying data up and down from the memory expansion to the system memory.
Commodore George Dewey of the Asiatic Fleet.
Yes, the Commodore Sx-64 does play Commodore 64 games. However, it does not have a Datasette port like a standard C-64, so you can only use software that is on a 5 1/4 disk.
Commodore has written: 'Commodore 64 Users Guide'
Yes, I use to play Oregan Trail on my Commodore 64.
The Commodore 64 computer used 8-bit MOS Technology.
the commodore 64
The Commodore 64 Orchestra - 2008 TV was released on: USA: 12 October 2008
No, the Commodore 64 was not the first home computer. The first widely successful home computer was the Commodore PET, which was released in 1977.
commodore 64 of course!
commodore 64
A MOS 6510 microprocessor
Glenn Fisher has written: 'Commodore 64' -- subject(s): BASIC (Computer program language), Programming, Commodore 64 (Computer)
Mary A. Hochberg has written: 'Getting graphic on the Commodore 64' -- subject(s): Commodore 64 (Computer), Computer graphics, Programming