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The CDTV was the first computer to come with a CD ROM drive as standard.
CDTV stood for Commodore Dynamic Total Vision.
It was made by Commodore International and launched in March 1991. Designed and marketed as a set-top box to go along with your VCR and be used as a CD-player and games console, it lost out to its main competitor CD-i, with neither having any real commercial success.
The CDTV was essentially a black Amiga with a CD ROM, but with the disadvantage of not having a keyboard, mouse or diskdrive as standard. Commodore chose Amiga magazines as its chief advertising platform, but the Amiga community on the whole avoided the CDTV in the expectation of an add-on CD-ROM drive for the Amiga, which eventually came in the form of the A570.
The CDTV was a commercial failure and was eventually replaced by the AmigaCD32.
CDTV Specifications:
CPU: Motorola 68000 @ 7.14Mhz.
Memory: 1 Meg Chip Memory.
Chipset: Enhanced Chip Set. (ECS)
OS: Kickstart 1.3 + CDTV module.
Debuted: March 1991 (At CES, Las Vegas)
Launch Price: £499 (CDTV, Joypad & 2 titles)
Versions:
CDTV: CDTV unit & joypad.
Pro pack: keyboard, mouse & diskdrive, along with Almathera CDPD Public Domain software compilation on CD-ROM
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