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- COMMODOREAN OF THE YEAR 2004
- [K. Dale Sidebottom]
-
-
- [DAVE'S FORWARD]: At the LUCKI Expo
- 2004, Dale gathered us into a circle
- to discuss the "future of Commodore."
- Many comments were made and ideas
- aired. While the decline of user
- groups was a worry, the technical
- advances and loyal support we have
- seen in the last years lifted our
- spirits.
-
- At some point, for immediate reasons I
- cannot recall (faulty memory at
- $c000), I nominated K. Dale Sidebottom
- as Commodorean of the Year for 2004,
- and the "quorum of those present"
- agreed.
-
- The immediate cause is fuzzy, but the
- ultimate reason for pointing to Dale
- is evident in the article that
- follows. He is a leader, an enabler, a
- cheerleader, an entrepreneur, and
- quite a philosopher.
-
- Others also deserve note for their
- leadership of our chaotic community --
- and will, I am sure, in the coming
- years. I have seen many groups
- gathered around hobbies and interests,
- but few have the heart and soul (not
- to mention tenacity!) of Commodorea!
-
- So, to you, K. Dale Sidebottom, we
- bestow upon you the distinction of
- Commodorean of the Year.
-
- (You can make your acceptance speach
- now...)
-
-
- When Dave Moorman informed me that
- I was to be honored in LoadStar, I
- thought back to the last time I was
- given recognition by this prestigious
- publication. Five years ago, Fender
- Tucker selected my August LUCKY REPORT
- as one of the five best Commodore
- newsletters of 1998. I'm not sure my
- August issue was so outstanding, but
- it was certainly unique!
-
- It was billed as the "Commodore's
- First Ever Swimsuit Issue." I worked
- hard on it, too. I asked some of our
- finest female fans to send me
- snapshots of themselves in bathing
- suits. I thought I could integrate
- these photos into a display of
- advanced CMD hardware that would get
- everyone's attention. After all, we
- see magazines featuring lovely ladies
- draped over automobiles and motor-
- cycles. Why not similarly extoll the
- "sexy" side of Commodore?
-
- But when I contacted these
- wonderful ladies of Commodore, they
- all politely replied, "Are you nuts!"
-
- To find models for my special
- issue, I was forced to scan pictures
- of classical works of art like Venus
- de Milo and Michelangelo's statue of
- David (using the HandyScanner 64).
- Coverting these scans into GEOS, I
- used geoPaint to add swimwear...an
- essential detail in any swimsuit
- issue.
-
- To give you an example, I plucked
- a nude from Reubens' famous painting,
- The Three Graces. I modestly covered
- her with a geo-bikini and placed a CMD
- device in her arms. The acompanying
- text began, "Peter Paul Reubens wanted
- his models to be hefty and robust. How
- about you? Do you enjoy big ones? Then
- you should check out the 1750XL. This
- beauty has two huge meagbytes of
- memory, the largest REU ever
- manufactured for the Commodore..."
-
- But that was back in 1999. To be
- honored in 2004 as Commodorean of the
- Year is even more gratifying. I
- realize that not all of you got to
- vote on this. Nevertheless, I hope
- that I have accomplished one or two
- things that merit such mention.
-
- If you would allow me to make a
- small acceptance speech, I would like
- to share with you my vision of what
- Commodoring ought to be and why I
- think it is important. All good things
- in Commodore are based upon what I
- consider to be the five essential
- tenets of Commodore philosophy. They
- are as follows:
-
- 1. The power of computing belongs in
- the hands of the user. We have a right
- to know what is going on "under the
- hood."
-
- 2. Programs should be backwardly
- compatible. Future advances should
- maintain respect for the past.
-
- 3. Obsolecesence, and especially
- artificial obsolecesence, should be
- voluntary...not mandatory.
-
- 4. Computer skill is demonstrated by
- producing more with less...not the
- reverse.
-
- 5. We should bear in mind the
- universal law of computing...that
- given proper time, program and
- peripherals, any computer can
- accomplish any computer task.
-
- Based upon these five principles,
- our participation in the worldwide
- Commodore community should always be a
- source of pleasure and pride. But
- there is more.
-
- Consider the history of the 64
- itself. This machine was born a child
- of serendipity. Think of it as a
- convergence of fortuitous events. When
- CBM developed the 64, it got
- lucky...like winning the lottery.
-
- Consider the operating system.
- Bill Gates was just getting started
- and didn't have much money, so Jack
- Tramiel was able to purchase an
- unlimited license to use Microsoft's
- version of the BASIC 2.0 programming
- language and operating system. It was
- more compact and worked faster than
- anyone else's. From the beginning, the
- PET -- then the 64 and even the 128 --
- profited from a BASIC OS that was not
- just cheap, but second to none! Today
- Bill Gates and Microsoft are
- acknowledged around the world as
- leaders in OS development...but back
- in the early days of 8-bit
- computing...WHO KNEW?
-
- The SID chip was created by Bob
- Yannes would later become the
- co-founder of Ensoniq, one the the
- best producers of synthesizers in the
- world. Before his genius was widely
- recognized, his 64 SID chip became one
- of the best sound devices ever used in
- 8-bit computers.
-
- In an internet interview he was
- asked, "What would you have changed in
- the SID's design, if you had a bigger
- budget from Commodore?" His answer
- surprised me. "The issue wasn't
- budget, it was development time and
- chip size constraints. The design/
- prototype/debug/production schedule
- of the SID chip, VIC II chip and
- Commodore 64 were incredibly tight
- (some would say impossibly tight). We
- did things faster than Commodore had
- ever done before and were never able
- to repeat after!"
-
- My point is that the 64 resulted
- from an unexpected union of happy
- happenstances. Things went better than
- anyone could have expected. Yet, after
- the 64 was on the market, CBM failed
- to appreciate how lucky they were to
- have it. Instead, they started using
- it as a loss leader. They drove down
- the price, hoping to attract people to
- the Commodore computer line in order
- to convert customers to more costly
- computers down the road. CBM bet its
- future on its ability to compete with
- the "Big Boys," namely IBM and Apple.
- To play up the 16-bit side (the Amiga
- and the Colt), it had to play down the
- 8-bit side...leaving the C64/128
- virtually abandoned and impoverished
- (no accelerator card, no improved
- video card, no hard drive, no CD
- access, etc.)
-
- This went on for years until, in
- the late 80's or early 90's,
- Commodore's CEO Irving Gould said of
- the 64, "We've been trying to kill
- that sucker for years!" But the joke
- was on CBM. The Commodore 64 turned
- out to be the most popular computer
- ever made, and CBM's treating it like
- an unloved step-child only quickened
- their demise.
-
- [DAVE'S INTERRUPTION]: One year after
- discontinuing the C-64, CBM is belly
- up! I figure [CBM] stood for
- Continually Bad Management. But,
- excuse me, Dale. Do go on...
-
-
- Imagine that you find a child cold
- and hungry. Would you feed it? Would
- you give it warm clothes? Would you
- try to make up for the needless
- suffering it has experienced in the
- past? Welcome to the C= World
- according to Dale. I see Commodoring
- as a challenge of fairness, an
- opportunity to establish equity. If my
- PC has a hard drive, then my 64 does,
- too. Why? Out of fairness, okay! If my
- PC can access a CD, so can my
- Commodore. If my PC is allowed to
- print pictures in 16 million colors,
- so is my 128. If you love a child, you
- make certain that that child has the
- same advantages as his/her peers, do
- you not? It's only fair!
-
- Obviously, the Commodore is not
- really a child. And there are many
- who believe that a 64 functions best
- when plainly attired, like a monk in a
- monastary. I have no argument with
- anyone as to the strengths of the
- stock Commodore system. If one can do
- everything they want to do with a C64,
- a 1541, and a dot-matrix printer; they
- have my highest admiration.
-
- But twenty years as a Commodore
- user have convinced me of a stark
- truth. People don't leave Commodore
- because of what others do with it.
- They leave it because they themselves
- have become bored or frustrated with
- it.
-
- To prevent these problems, we must
- continually challenge ourselves and
- and our Commodores! Some of this is
- done by using the stock 64 in new
- ways. For some, it is a matter of
- adding new peripherals or programs and
- learning to use them. For some, it is
- a matter of watching how a PC does it
- and saying to oneself, "I know that
- any computer can do any computer task,
- so what must I do to accomplish this
- on a Commodore?"
-
- What I have also discovered over a
- period of 20 years is that the
- Commodore community is divided into
- may parts...stock users, power users,
- emulators, demo artists, programmers,
- musicians, collectors, and so on. Each
- area is in many ways independent of
- the others. My prime directive is to
- encourage everybody to get on the same
- side of this thing and push! My
- purpose is to convince all parties
- that it is to our mutual advantage
- that we work together. A rising tide
- lifts all boats. Whatever spurs a
- broader interest in Commodore, in
- general, will profit us all.
-
- Again, I want to thank Dave and
- Sheri Moorman for their dedicated
- work in regards to LOADSTAR and their
- support of the Commodore community.
- It is my hope that this honor which
- they have bestowed upon me will
- encourage others to promote a closer
- bond of friendship within this
- worldwide computer family. And we
- hope those friendships continue to
- grow in strength and number for many
- years to come.
-
- K. Dale Sidebottom
-
- President of the LUCKI Club
- (a.k.a. Lucky Users of the
- Commodore Klassic International)
-
- Managing Editor of the Commodore
- Digest
-
-
- [DAVE AGAIN]: Thank you, Dale! What
- other piece of technology has created
- an international family?
-
-
- The Commodorean Hymn
- (To the tune of
- "Give me that Old Time Religion")
-
-
- Give me that old time computer (x3)
- It's good enough for me!
-
- It shows 16 vibrant colors (x3)
- It's good enough for me!
-
- Has a three voice synthesizer (x3)
- It's good enough for me!
-
- It does everything but Windows (x3)
- It's good enough for me!
-
- Amen!
-
- DMM
-
-
-