Victor: The power to control won't cost you the Earth From a somewhat baffling advert featuring a raging dude who looks like a cross between Bill Bixby as David Banner and Lou Ferigno as the Hulk in the 80s TV series The Incredible Hulk, comes the Victor VPC 15. Victor Business Products had been a large American calculator seller, but was in financial trouble when Chuck Peddle, designer of the 6502 processor and once of Commodore, bailed it out so it could become the OEM manufacturer of his new Victor 9000 computer - otherwise known in Europe as the Sirius 1. The original plan was that Victor was to market the machine in the US, whilst Sirius had Europe and the rest of the world. However Sirius, which had been co-founded with former Commodore financier Chris Fish and part-financed by the Kidde Inc. - the parent of Victor - went through several transformations, and it wasn't always clear which company was in charge of what and who was reselling whom. It all ended up with Sirius buying back the Victor name at the end of 1982 - incorporating its previous logo in to the "o" of Victor and rebranding itself Victor Technologies - but the company found itself in Chapter 11 by the end of 1984[source: HCW, p. 134]. After it exited Chapter 11, by which time Peddle had moved to Tandon - another IBM clone manufacturer - the company went on to produce its own inevitable IBM clone - the VPC 15 - which was now being built in Singapore to reduce costs. The VPC 15 retailed for £1,999, or around [[1999|1985]] in [[now]] money. By the late summer of 1988, Peddle, who had been Tandon's president, had moved on to become "adviser and consultant" to the chief executive Sirjang Lal Tandon. This appeared to be a relief to the staff of Tandon as Peddle had a reputation - not unlike that of Chris Curry of Acorn - of insisting that nothing was done unless he did it himself. Tandon had been trying to release a pioneering removable hard disk unit, but it had been delayed whilst it was beta-tested to ensure that it really did work with all the 286 and 386 machines on the market - testing that, according to Guy Kewney of PCW, should have been done the year before. It was this sort of delay that prompted Peddle's move sideways, away from day-to-day management to the sort of strategic thinking he was considered much better at. There was however some nervousness that Peddle might take it the wrong way, as having started several companies already he might think nothing of jumping ship again to start again[source: "Peddle on the move", PCW, September 1988, p. 91].