Thirty years ago, on July 23, 1985, Commodore took to the stage in New York to reveal the Amiga 1000, a personal computer with unprecedented multimedia capabilities and an intuitive interface that ...
Previously unknown Andy Warhol artwork, made on a 1985 Commodore Amiga computer, was recently extracted from obsolete floppy disks. The Andy Warhol Museum said in a statement released Thursday that a ...
Forget the Apple Macintosh, Ridley Scott, and "1984." As computer launches go, we'll take the Commodore Amiga, Andy Warhol, and Debbie Harry. In January 1984---as the entire Western World is well ...
Data recovery isn’t a lost art, but it can find lost art. Case in point: The Andy Warhol Museum announced on Thursday that it has recovered a series of forgotten doodles, pictures, camera shots, notes ...
Nearly three decades after its initial introduction, the Amiga personal computer has been given a makeover with a new design and some of the latest computing technologies. The first Amiga, the Amiga ...
The floppy disk may be extinct today, but it was cutting-edge technology when Andy Warhol used it to store a number of digital artworks and doodles created on his Commodore Amiga home computer in the ...
The Amiga has a lot of fans, and rightly so. The machine broke a lot of ground. However, according to [Dave Farquhar], one of the most popular models today — the Amiga 600 — was reviled in 1992 by ...
Today the Andy Warhol Museum announced that a collection of never before seen Warhol art had been uncovered from Amiga floppy disks. The artwork was commissioned by Commodore International and used an ...
The Amiga 1000, a computer released by Commodore in the mid-1980s, became legendary for its power compared to other machines available at the time. The Amiga developed a cult following of users, some ...