On the edge: the spectacular rise and fall of Commodore

(Source Template)


reviews/on_the_edge.xml

    <?xml version="1.0"?>
    
    <page title="On the edge: the spectacular rise and fall of Commodore" keywords="">
    
    <item>
      <p>Author: Brian Bagnall </p>
      <p>ISBN: <isbn>0-9738649-0-7</isbn></p>
      <p>Publisher: <a href="http://www.commodorebook.com/">Variant Press</a></p>
      <p>Reviewed by: John Costello</p>
    </item><item>
    
    <p>Brian Bagnall's history of two decades of Commodore teeters on the edge 
    of being a good book, much as its subject teetered on the edge of               
    success, but the assemblage of interviews and magazine excerpts is as           
    messy as its subject.  On the edge: the spectacular rise and fall of            
    Commodore does deliver on its promise of two decades of Commodore history       
    as told by engineers and managers, but the best voices with no exception        
    are the voices of the engineers.  Bagnall mostly lets the engineers speak       
    for themselves and tell the history of their major projects, from the           
    6502 and Pet development, through the heyday of the C64, to the evolution       
    of the Amiga, down to the final disintegration of the company.</p>                  
    
    <p>The book is part obituary and part tribute, beginning with the quote "Do
    you remember? I do" from the musical group Bouncing Souls and ending Byte       
    Magazine's August, 1994 obituary of the company and a "Where are they           
    now?" section about the major characters mentioned in the book.  Between        
    these sections, Bagnall charts the course of the company in segments            
    between one and four years per chapter.  At times, he revisits the events       
    of a given in year in separate chapters and refers backwards and forwards       
    in time.</p>                                                                        
    
    <p>This chronological approach does not work well for Bagnall.  He sometimes                                                                      
    makes declarations that contradict earlier events and his constant              
    jumping can make for tedious and muddled reading.  In a chapter covering        
    1981 to 1983, we hear that after the departure of Commodore's lead              
    engineer, Chuck Peddle, ideas for a business computer are ignored by            
    Tramiel.  In the following chapter (Eleven) that deals with 1981, we are        
    told that once Peddle left Commodore Tramiel proposed a line of business        
    computers.  That contradiction is not acknowledged or explained, nor does       
    Bagnall explain contradicting statements at the beginning of Chapter            
    Eleven.  Near the middle of the book, Bagnall begins to repeat quotes           
    from his interviews, and it is apparent that either Bagnall or his editor       
    had trouble digesting 44 hours of interviews and dozens of magazine             
    articles.  At times, Bagnall disingenuously juxtaposes quotes from his          
    interviews to assemble a pseudo-dialog, and the results are stilted and         
    unpleasant.</p>                                                                     
    
    <p>Despite some flaws in the book's construction, the book succeeds in     
    telling the evolution of Commodore's major and minor systems and                
    chronicling the internal battles fought over the development of each            
    system.  Bagnall competently describes the chip design processes of the         
    1970s, details the challenges faced by engineers who were ordered to            
    produce working models on short notice before major trade shows, revives        
    the aura of success surrounding Commodore in the 1980s, and does an             
    excellent job illustrating the erratic course of the company.  The              
    company's successes and brilliance shines through the recollection of           
    engineers, and Bagnall details the low points in sections entitled "The         
    Curse of Commodore."  Each curse is numbered as though a sequel to the          
    previous curse, and like any sequel some curses indicate greater damage         
    to the company.  It is telling that chapter 22 contains the last section        
    listing a curse, because the following final two chapters are a                 
    continuous series of missteps, anger, frustration and failure.  Bagnall         
    would have been challenged to identify a single misstep during                  
    Commodore's final six years.</p>                                                    
    
    <p>The strength of the book is in the anecdotes told by the engineers, and 
    their memories brought back happy personal memories of the machines.            
    Anyone who propped open a PET to let it cool on a hot summer day, or who        
    programmed their first complex code on a C64, or even who enjoyed               
    tinkering with a 6502 processor may remember fondly those distant days          
    spent trying to make the Peeks and Pokes bend to one's will.  Readers           
    outside of North America may be disappointed by the light attention given       
    Commodore's international business, but the focus on America derives from       
    the location of the engineers who designed the machines.  The book              
    suffers the lack of an index, which would make it easier to untangle            
    Bagnall's rambling story, and the bibliography is respectable.  The book        
    was worth the several-month wait between announcement and publication,          
    and would be a fine book to read during the holidays when one has tired         
    of food, family and all things non-technical.</p>                   
    
    </item>
    </page>
    
    

reviews/on_the_edge.xml

    <?xml version="1.0"?>
    
    <page title="On the edge: the spectacular rise and fall of Commodore" keywords="">
    
    <item>
      <p>Author: Brian Bagnall </p>
      <p>ISBN: <isbn>0-9738649-0-7</isbn></p>
      <p>Publisher: <a href="http://www.commodorebook.com/">Variant Press</a></p>
      <p>Reviewed by: John Costello</p>
    </item><item>
    
    <p>Brian Bagnall's history of two decades of Commodore teeters on the edge 
    of being a good book, much as its subject teetered on the edge of               
    success, but the assemblage of interviews and magazine excerpts is as           
    messy as its subject.  On the edge: the spectacular rise and fall of            
    Commodore does deliver on its promise of two decades of Commodore history       
    as told by engineers and managers, but the best voices with no exception        
    are the voices of the engineers.  Bagnall mostly lets the engineers speak       
    for themselves and tell the history of their major projects, from the           
    6502 and Pet development, through the heyday of the C64, to the evolution       
    of the Amiga, down to the final disintegration of the company.</p>                  
    
    <p>The book is part obituary and part tribute, beginning with the quote "Do
    you remember? I do" from the musical group Bouncing Souls and ending Byte       
    Magazine's August, 1994 obituary of the company and a "Where are they           
    now?" section about the major characters mentioned in the book.  Between        
    these sections, Bagnall charts the course of the company in segments            
    between one and four years per chapter.  At times, he revisits the events       
    of a given in year in separate chapters and refers backwards and forwards       
    in time.</p>                                                                        
    
    <p>This chronological approach does not work well for Bagnall.  He sometimes                                                                      
    makes declarations that contradict earlier events and his constant              
    jumping can make for tedious and muddled reading.  In a chapter covering        
    1981 to 1983, we hear that after the departure of Commodore's lead              
    engineer, Chuck Peddle, ideas for a business computer are ignored by            
    Tramiel.  In the following chapter (Eleven) that deals with 1981, we are        
    told that once Peddle left Commodore Tramiel proposed a line of business        
    computers.  That contradiction is not acknowledged or explained, nor does       
    Bagnall explain contradicting statements at the beginning of Chapter            
    Eleven.  Near the middle of the book, Bagnall begins to repeat quotes           
    from his interviews, and it is apparent that either Bagnall or his editor       
    had trouble digesting 44 hours of interviews and dozens of magazine             
    articles.  At times, Bagnall disingenuously juxtaposes quotes from his          
    interviews to assemble a pseudo-dialog, and the results are stilted and         
    unpleasant.</p>                                                                     
    
    <p>Despite some flaws in the book's construction, the book succeeds in     
    telling the evolution of Commodore's major and minor systems and                
    chronicling the internal battles fought over the development of each            
    system.  Bagnall competently describes the chip design processes of the         
    1970s, details the challenges faced by engineers who were ordered to            
    produce working models on short notice before major trade shows, revives        
    the aura of success surrounding Commodore in the 1980s, and does an             
    excellent job illustrating the erratic course of the company.  The              
    company's successes and brilliance shines through the recollection of           
    engineers, and Bagnall details the low points in sections entitled "The         
    Curse of Commodore."  Each curse is numbered as though a sequel to the          
    previous curse, and like any sequel some curses indicate greater damage         
    to the company.  It is telling that chapter 22 contains the last section        
    listing a curse, because the following final two chapters are a                 
    continuous series of missteps, anger, frustration and failure.  Bagnall         
    would have been challenged to identify a single misstep during                  
    Commodore's final six years.</p>                                                    
    
    <p>The strength of the book is in the anecdotes told by the engineers, and 
    their memories brought back happy personal memories of the machines.            
    Anyone who propped open a PET to let it cool on a hot summer day, or who        
    programmed their first complex code on a C64, or even who enjoyed               
    tinkering with a 6502 processor may remember fondly those distant days          
    spent trying to make the Peeks and Pokes bend to one's will.  Readers           
    outside of North America may be disappointed by the light attention given       
    Commodore's international business, but the focus on America derives from       
    the location of the engineers who designed the machines.  The book              
    suffers the lack of an index, which would make it easier to untangle            
    Bagnall's rambling story, and the bibliography is respectable.  The book        
    was worth the several-month wait between announcement and publication,          
    and would be a fine book to read during the holidays when one has tired         
    of food, family and all things non-technical.</p>                   
    
    </item>
    </page>