I recently acquired a prototype Commodore C900 that is a Unix workstation. The keyboard is hand painted and has some interesting switches, I think but because it's a prototype, there are no markings anywhere except for Z-8000 which is the internal project name. Here are some pics:
Commodore 900 prototype keyboard
- PlacaFromHell
- Location: Argentina
- Main keyboard: IBM 3101
- Main mouse: Optical piece of shit
- Favorite switch: Beamspring
- DT Pro Member: -
Mitsumi switchessnuci wrote: 02 Apr 2020, 22:42 I recently acquired a prototype Commodore C900 that is a Unix workstation. The keyboard is hand painted and has some interesting switches, I think but because it's a prototype, there are no markings anywhere except for Z-8000 which is the internal project name.

-
- Location: Stockholm, Sweden
- DT Pro Member: 0011
Wow! That's a piece of computing history. It is what Commodore worked on before buying Amiga, overlapping the time when Commodore's founder Jack Tramiel was forced out -- to buy Atari's computer division.
The Zilog Z-8000 was the CPU in the computer. It was a 16-bit successor to the Z-80.
The layout reminds me of both Amiga 1000 and Atari ST - especially the Mega ST keyboard which had similar function keys and used (cheaper). The Amiga 1000 keyboards also had mechanical Mitsumi switches.
Those switches do look like some variation of Mitsumi "standard mechanical" with Mitsumi mount, like the Amiga keyboards.
Some Japanese-made AEKII did have Mitsumi switches with Alps mount.
The Zilog Z-8000 was the CPU in the computer. It was a 16-bit successor to the Z-80.
The layout reminds me of both Amiga 1000 and Atari ST - especially the Mega ST keyboard which had similar function keys and used (cheaper). The Amiga 1000 keyboards also had mechanical Mitsumi switches.
Those switches do look like some variation of Mitsumi "standard mechanical" with Mitsumi mount, like the Amiga keyboards.
Some Japanese-made AEKII did have Mitsumi switches with Alps mount.