[MODERATOR'S NOTE: I am sure that some of you are shaking your heads in disbelief that someone is reviewing an ancient Amiga 1000 over 8 years after its release! However, this review has an interesting perspective that might be helpful to some of you: it views the A1000 as a cheap choice for a second computer. With used A1000's available very inexpensively now, some readers may find this information useful. - Dan]
Name: | Commodore Business Machine |
Address: | 1200 Wilson Drive West Chester, PA 19380 USA (Varies for other countries) |
Telephone: | (800) 66-AMIGA (USA/Canada only) (215) 431-9100 |
The case of this computer is probably the best designed that I have seen. Being able to store the keyboard underneath the computer is a real plus when working with no space (I just put it where I was thinking of putting my books for college). I may be dreaming, but imagine an AGA machine in an A1000 case. It would be grand. The only design problem I see with this computer is the poor keyboard layout. It feels great, but I keep hitting the wrong keys. Luckily, Commodore corrected the keyboard problem with the rest of the Amiga line, and you can use an A2000 keyboard on the A1000 with an adapter. Doing this robs you of the ability to store the keyboard underneath the computer though.
As for running software, I have found nothing that does not work on this machine. Shadow of the Beast 3 worked flawlessly, as did Archon (this can not be said for any other of the Amiga machines). I do not have anything that is AmigaDOS 2.0 specific, but I am sure with the proper hardware, anything will run on it except AGA stuff. I ran some old demos and basically got to take a trip through history. All of this for the price of a used C64, monitor, disk drive, and (if you are lucky) a printer.
There are ways to install ROM's, hard drives, and accelerators. Many of these can be acquired used as well. Even as an unexpanded system, this makes for a nice new toy. (I use the word "toy" not like a small child's toy, but more like an overgrown child's toy.)
I did not like the keyboard layout, or using Kickstart disks, but like I said both of these can be corrected if they really irritate you.
This computer cannot be improved, because it is not being made anymore. If Commodore were to come out with a new Amiga in a similar case, I would like it. With a 68030 CPU, hard drive, and AGA chips for less than less than 1000 US dollars, and this would be the perfect Amiga. These are more redesigns than improvements though.
Comparing it to an A500 with Workbench 2.04 is the only other comparison I can do. Saying Workbench 2.04 is better than 1.2 is like saying an F40 is better than a Yugo. But as far as the design of the case, I would much rather have an A1000 than an A500. If you do any typing, then a detachable keyboard is great. If you only want to play games, then go with whatever is cheapest. Actually for any game that uses the keyboard, a detachable keyboard is still great.