Original URL: http://www.theregister.co.uk/2004/05/06/tulip_c64_revival/
Tulip to revive CBM 64 as games console
Blast from the past
Posted in Consoles, 6th May 2004 10:40 GMT
Dutch PC maker Tulip has quietly revived a system dead for more than a decade: the Commodore 64.
However, the upcoming C64 Direct-to-TV - which Tulip considers a "powerful" name, apparently - will no home computer but a "mini game console".
Due to ship in Europe and the US for a mere €30 ($37) during the second half of the year, the C64 DTV will launch with 30 titles taken from the C64 software archive pre-programmed into the device.
Tulip promises the device will be "the first of a whole series of entertainment products... using the Commodore name and label".
Tulip claims the C64 DTV is the "first new incarnation of the Commodore 64 hardware in over a decade", but we don't think it is. Tulip acquired Commodore in 1997 and the following year released the also powerfully named C64 WebIT, essentially a Windows CE-based box with an AMD chip, built-in modem and bundled C64 emulation software. Tulip eventually dropped the $400 product.
The C64 DTV sounds like the same kind of gig: a box with integrated C64 emulation. That explains the involvement of Ironstone, the UK company that in July 2003 licensed the Commodore 64 brand-name and the right to offer an 'official' C64 emulator.
Tulip admits the C64 DTV is something of a 'me too' product - the decision to offer the box was "prompted by the success of similar products based on the Atari, Namco and Intellivision gaming systems", the company says in a statement.
Tulip is perhaps best known outside of C64 circles as the company that sued Dell for $17bn, though it later accepted a mere $50m in an out-of-court settlement. Tulip alleged that Dell had infringed its patent covering how you connect PCI cards to an AT-format motherboard. ®
Related stories
CBM 64 licence deal heralds emulator clamp down [1]
Commodore wannabe don't want to be Commodore no more [2]
Amiga developer in talks to buy Commodore name [3]
Dell reaches $50 million settlement with Tulip [4]
Tulip sues Dell over alleged $17bn patent infringement [5]
Links
- http://www.theregister.co.uk/2003/07/14/cbm_64_licence_deal_heralds/
- http://www.theregister.co.uk/1999/09/09/commodore_wannabe_dont_want/
- http://www.theregister.co.uk/1999/08/16/amiga_developer_in_talks/
- http://www.theregister.co.uk/2003/07/08/dell_reaches_50_million_settlement/
- http://www.theregister.co.uk/2000/11/27/tulip_sues_dell_over_alleged/
