The first true multimedia computer Anyone who is cool either worked on an Amiga, owned an Amiga, or claims to have been on the periphery of the Amiga's design
{i} personal computer that was produced by Commodore and introduced to the public in 1985 (currently a product of Amiga Inc.)
A Unix-based animation computer that was built by Commodore The natural output was RGB, the same technology as television These computers were once the world's best for games and graphics when the PC was still in the 286 / 386 days and couldn't handle dynamic graphics Matra's first CBT training assignments were Amiga based Amiga CD-ROM's were amongst the first reasonably priced home CD-ROM systems available Amiga systems were used intensively by graphics designers, computer artists and games designers and were known for being user friendly and simple-to-operate They still have a large following in Great Britain Matra still retains a few functioning Amiga platforms as animator training machines
This was a 16-bit home computer running games off of disk Because it was 16-bit the graphics were far better than the Amstrad, Spectrum and Commodore games In fact most games were made first for the Amiga and then downsized to fit the other formats You could play games on keyboard or two button joystick This was a very popular computer in it's time Made mid-late eighties