Here it is… the latest… the greatest (well, one of them)… it's a production AmigaOne A1222+ running OS 4.1 Final Edition and Enhancer 2.2! See how it handles new OS 4.1 apps and classic Amiga games/demos/music. A1222+ courtesy of Robert Bernardo
This little box from AmigaKit runs OCS/ECS/AGA Amiga software and sports the new Amibench desktop. A600GS courtesy of Robert Bernardo
The Amiga that started it all! :) This one has OS 1.3, 2.0, and 3.1 switchable from the Parceiro II+. A1000 courtesy of Devon Andrade (Saturday only)
See how to digitize images with an A2000 and the classic app, DigiView! A2000 courtesy of Rob Barlow
This A3000 has the 68030 processor running at 25 MHz, 16 megs of Fast RAM, OS 2.0, and a Video Toaster! A3000 courtesy of the Interim Computer Museum
The A4000 being exhibited has a 68040 25 MHz. CPU, OS 3.9, 2 megs Chip RAM, 16 megs Fast RAM, and a 16 gig CF hard drive. A4000 courtesy of Robert Bernardo
Inside the black CDTV case that looks as if it would be in your stereo system of the 1980's, CBM put in an Amiga 500 plus one-speed CD drive. This one comes with matching Amiga keyboard and mouse plus added DCTV output. Commodore CDTV courtesy of Robert Bernardo
Check out one of the first 32-bit game consoles to be sold, the Amiga CD32. CD32 courtesy of Robert Bernardo
Here's a rare one. It's a SuperPET! Two CPU's and 96K of RAM! SuperPET courtesy of the Interim Computer Museum
See the C16 in action with the latest games! C16 courtesy of Robert Bernardo
Before the C64, the VIC-20 was Commodore Business Machines' sales leader. This VIC-20 sports a SD2IEC with switchable RAM expansion and a Behr-Bohz multicart. VIC-20 courtesy of Robert Bernardo
The Mega65 is the modern replica to the mythical Commodore 65 which was never publicly released. The Mega65 has a full keyboard, C65 and C64 modes, a built-in 3 1/2“ floppy drive, HDMI out, a SD card slot, and acceleration up to 40 MHz.. Mega65 courtesy of Dan Sanderson
Not just an ordinary Commodore 64 in a breadbox, this is the Ultimate 64, a redesigned C64 made of modern components. See https://ultimate64.com This U64 comes in a new Kickstarter C64C case and has a MechBoard 64 with its Cherry Blue microswitches. U64 courtesy of the late Bogdan Macri of the Southern California Commodore & Amiga Network
Here is a sweet, flat C128 with Ray Carlsen power supply, TeensyROM 4.1, and autographed by William Shatner! C128 courtesy of Robert Bernardo
This is not the metal C128DCR. This is the plastic C128D from Europe! Well, the United Kingdom specifically. Instead of the DCR's one motherboard to control the 128 computer and 1571 disk drive, the D's have a separate motherboard for computer and another for the disk drive. This one still displays PAL video, but the power supply has been replaced with modern North American p.s., thanks to Ray Carlsen. C128D courtesy of Robert Bernardo
Connected to a classic Amiga, see this rare musical keyboard and its software in action! Miracle Piano Teaching System courtesy of Robert Bernardo.
Examine this very capable cartridge with so many features, like ROM emulator, MIDI USB Host & Device, Internet interface, NFC Launch System, TeensyROM UI and Cross-platform Command Line Interface, SID Player, Bitmap Picture viewer, Text/PETSCII viewer, Custom BASIC Commands, Autolaunch, games-utilities-pics-music built-in, and multiple hardware interfaces! https://github.com/SensoriumEmbedded/TeensyROM See Katie S. play her MIDI wind instrument via MIO MIDI-to-USB cable to a Commodore 128 (in C64 mode) with a TeensyROM cartridge running Cynthcart 2.0 - https://youtu.be/bBozWaGuqMI
Check out the various Ray Carlsen power supplies powering the Commodore 8-bit and desktop Amigas computers.