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<center>''"The ColecoVision family computer system."''</center>
 
<center>''"The ColecoVision family computer system."''</center>
   
Coleco's Adam computer was meant to be the company's savior, after the Crash of '83 shot down the ColecoVision console. In fact, not only it was derived from the ColecoVision, it was available both as an expansion module for it or as a standalone machine. It was planned as a powerful and affordable system, even though it had a bundled printer, a luxury at the time. However, even the best-laid plans often go awry... and the Adam was far from a well-laid plan.
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Coleco's Adam computer was meant to be the company's savior, after the Crash of '83 shot down the ColecoVision console. In fact, not only it was derived from the ColecoVision, it was available both as an expansion module for it or as a standalone machine. It was planned as a powerful and affordable system, and it even had a bundled printer, a luxury at the time.
   
Let's count the ways Coleco fucked up:
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However, even the best-laid plans often go awry... and the Adam went ''spectacularly'' awry. Let's count the ways Coleco fucked up:
   
 
Due to manufacturing problems, it was released several months after the announced date, at a higher price than planned. Its failure rate was extremely high. It was not possible to use the computer without the printer attached, because that's where they decided to put the power supply. That also made it incompatible with any other printer in the market. Its BASIC was full of bugs. Its tape drives seemed outdated, as other machines were moving to faster and more reliable floppy disks. And worst of all: the Adam generated a strong magnetic pulse when it was powered on, potentially erasing any tape left in the drives or even near the machine.
 
Due to manufacturing problems, it was released several months after the announced date, at a higher price than planned. Its failure rate was extremely high. It was not possible to use the computer without the printer attached, because that's where they decided to put the power supply. That also made it incompatible with any other printer in the market. Its BASIC was full of bugs. Its tape drives seemed outdated, as other machines were moving to faster and more reliable floppy disks. And worst of all: the Adam generated a strong magnetic pulse when it was powered on, potentially erasing any tape left in the drives or even near the machine.
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{{Second Generation}}
 
{{Second Generation}}
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[[Category:Computer]]

Latest revision as of 02:05, 28 April 2019

Coleco Adam logo blue
"The ColecoVision family computer system."

Coleco's Adam computer was meant to be the company's savior, after the Crash of '83 shot down the ColecoVision console. In fact, not only it was derived from the ColecoVision, it was available both as an expansion module for it or as a standalone machine. It was planned as a powerful and affordable system, and it even had a bundled printer, a luxury at the time.

However, even the best-laid plans often go awry... and the Adam went spectacularly awry. Let's count the ways Coleco fucked up:

Due to manufacturing problems, it was released several months after the announced date, at a higher price than planned. Its failure rate was extremely high. It was not possible to use the computer without the printer attached, because that's where they decided to put the power supply. That also made it incompatible with any other printer in the market. Its BASIC was full of bugs. Its tape drives seemed outdated, as other machines were moving to faster and more reliable floppy disks. And worst of all: the Adam generated a strong magnetic pulse when it was powered on, potentially erasing any tape left in the drives or even near the machine.

Second Generation
Consoles Emerson Arcadia 2001 - Atari 2600 - Atari 5200 - Epoch Cassete Vision - ColecoVision - Fairchild Channel F - Mattel Intellivision - Magnavox Odyssey² - Bally Professional Arcade - Sega SG-1000 - RCA Studio II - Interton VC 4000 - Milton Bradley Vectrex
Handhelds Entex Adventure Vision - Nintendo Game & Watch - Milton Bradley Microvision
Computers Apple I - Apple II - Apple III - Atari 8-bit - Acorn BBC Micro - Commodore PET - Tandy TRS-80 - Tandy TRS-80 CoCo