ttlworks wrote:
Now that's interesting: Commodore didn't want the C65 (3.54MHz 65CE02 core) to compete with the Amiga.
But instead of just slowing down the C65, C65 went axed.
I believe the IIgs was allowed to live because, at the time, the Macintosh was still on unproven ground. The IIe was still the "bread-n-butter" of Apple and the Lisa and Apple III were failures. So I believe, from what I've read, the IIgs was a logical next step.
Also, initially, I think the IIgs actually sold pretty well. It just never sold the millions like the IIe did. So, I wouldn't call it a failure. I also believe it did a better job being backwards compatible with the IIe than the C128 did for the C64. The IIgs was a quantum leap from the IIe but the C128 wasn't all that much better than a C64. This was helped by the "Mega II" chip on the IIgs.
The IIgs really was an underrated computer. 4096 colors. 32 voice synthesizer. Fully 16 bit with 8 bit IIe mode.
From what I understand, Woz and many "Woz followers" created the IIgs. They were just crippled by Jobs. Woz designed computers that he wanted...which, turns out, I want too. Woz-designed computers appealed to the engineers in us.
ttlworks wrote:
Hmm... there is a joke, that in hardware design only 5% of the decisions really are technology related.
The rest is tied to politics, logistics, existing tool chains... and dogma.
Unfortunately, the same can be said for software.
**EDIT**
Now that I think about it, the 65C816 was underrated too. Other than the SNES and the IIgs, I can't think of anything it was used in that sold in large quantities. Makes me wonder why it's still around. There must be some use for it or they wouldn't keep making them.
I guess when the 68020 - 68060 came out, the '816 just couldn't compete. Especially when paired with FPU's. Of course, I image an '816 could utilize an FPU too.
This really makes me wonder what kind of computer could be designed around a 14MHz '816 these days.