On 10/4/2021 at 12:52 PM, Scott Robison said:
The case and keyboard I used for comparison is from
https://myretrocomputer.com/.
135£ + 45£ shipping =
$308 CAD,
before duty and 13% tax (on the value in CAD, which is, of course, a lager number than 13% of the value in GBP, because screw me for being born here I guess). For a plastic box with a keyboard. That said, I appreciate the comparison, because in the UK it works out quite well, spiritually and numerically!
? For Commander X16 compatible comparison though, I could buy
this steel and tempered glass ATX case for $120 CAD and
this "tenkeyless" keyboard with an aluminum plate and Cherry MX switches for $80 CAD, with free shipping. Both are total overkill and both offer better build quality than either retro case. Furthermore, there are
plenty of cheaper options for both cases and mechanical keyboards that have comparable build quality.
But... what ya just can't get for a reasonable price in North America is a frick'n keyboard chassis with room to install a computer underneath! Well, unless you count the $95
Raspberry Pi 400, which I don't, because that keyboard is
balls awful and the case only fits the Pi 400.
Again the fully realized X16 wins, because it's compatible with any ATX case and there's an enormous variety of keyboards one could use, from a new Unicomp Model M ($104 USD) to a $1 Salvation Army special. While that case + keyboard combo isn't the same look and feel as the computer-inside-the-keyboard paradigm, there is still plenty of nostalgia to be had from the case + keyboard design (especially if one is willing to modify an actual retro case or to create their own custom case).
More importantly though, this isn't 1985. Back then the capabilities offered by these machines were state of the art, but today no one
needs these computers for
anything. In other words, they're both toys. Expensive toys. Now, a low price tag can make any nick knack intriguing to the general public, but a high price tag? Yeah, that will give anyone pause. Will I use this? Why do I need this? Do I want this instead of that other thing I was looking at earlier? I can't help but feel that the X16's lower cost of entry, combined with its greater compatibility and expansion capability, make it a more enticing product to a wider audience.
At $200 USD, an X16 board would allow a person to jump in and start using the device with the peripherals they already own. That's roughly 1/4 the cost of the Mega65. This is a worthy consideration for anyone but the most extreme fans of this subject matter.