The First Honest-to-Goodness Full Color Computer - William Shatner The US counterpart to Ronnie Barker, who had been pressed in to service advertising Commodore PETs in the UK with his trademark punnery and word-play, was none other than William "Captain Kirk" Shatner, seen here introducing the VIC-20 with the folksy phrase "honest-to-goodness". The message of the advert, stressing the "friendliness" of the VIC, was partly a result of Commodore founder Jack Tramiel's insistence on computers "for the masses, not the classes", as well as input from Commodore's recently-hired new marketing strategist Michael Tomczyk. It was also Tomczyk who suggested the retail price of $299.95 (about [[200|1981]] in [[now]] money), because that was a price that sounded friendly too. When Shatner was being shown around the VIC-20 by Tomczyk, it was revealed that it was the first time that the captain of the USS Enterprise had ever used a real computer[source: http://www.academia.edu/2242039/The_First_Home_Computer_30_Years_Later]. [picture: shatner_perscomp_may82.jpg|Another advert featuring William Shatner showing the compulsory comparison chart and some of the software available for the VIC. It was "The best computer value in the world today. The only computer you'll need for years to come". From Personal Computing, May 1982] The strategy also involved selling the VIC through high-street retailers rather than potentially-intimidating computer resellers, which helped make the VIC the first computer of any type to sell over one million units. Although Commodore arguably created the home computer market in the US with the VIC, through a combination of accessible advertising and direct-to-High-Street sales - annoying Commodore's established dealer network in the process - the idea of selling via regular shops, and not computer dealers, was not entirely new. Ohio Scientific, makers of high-end microcomputers, as well as the more budget (but definitely technical) Superboard, had experimented with the format back in 1980, when it tried selling its budget range in US department-store chain Montgomery Ward. Sales were poor, largely because the products were still perceived as technical and so only business types came in, and when they did they were asking questions about business applications and software that the washing-machine and hair-dryer-trained sales clerks could not answer[source: "Yankee doodles", PCW, September 1980, p. 43]. Commodore's arch-rival Tandy/Radio Shack was also on Main Street, with its national chain of retail outlets.