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Commodore 64 Microcomputer National Museum of American History

Commodore 64 Microcomputer  National Museum of American History

Introduced at the Consumer Electronics Show in January 1982, the Commodore 64 was an inexpensive and popular home computer. It used an MOS 6510, 1 mHz processor, and had 64 kilobytes of random access memory -- hence its name.

National Museum of American History

Computer Game Museum Collections - Commodore Hardware and Ads Gallery

The computer revolution

Flight of the Commodore: How the iconic computer led to a golden age of geeks, The Independent

Commodore 64 – Joe's Computer Museum

The 20 Most Influential PCs of the Past 40 Years

Epsilon's World: My Commodore 64 has arrived with SD2IEC and Chameleon64!

The return of the Commodore 64

8 bit personal computer hi-res stock photography and images - Alamy

Geek Pilgrimage: Computer History Museum, Mountain View

Three decades of the Commodore 64

National Museum of American History