Syd! thanks,,..  is the Toaster Flyer a board inside the Amiga?  it may be
there...
Did you save any promotional material  etc?  Thins like that look  good in
a display  with the gear.
We also need to scrounge a keyboard and a mouse
.
thanks Ed#  _www.smecc.org_ (
http://www.smecc.org)
In a message dated 1/11/2017 7:38:46 P.M. US Mountain Standard Time,
sbolton at bfree.on.ca writes:
No,  C64's were too limited (8-bit) to do anything video related.
However,  video production was actually possible with the Amiga 1000 as
you could  get the Amiga 1300 Genlock, and the Amiga itself always
natively produced  composite video ....real true non-linear editing with
the computer itself  however was really only done with the Toaster Flyer
unit (the Video  Toaster itself just produced video effects/titling and
came bundled with  LightWave 3D).
I used to be a Commodore dealer, and the NewTek (Video  Toaster)
distributor in Canada, so if you need any info hit me  up!
Syd Bolton
Personal Computer  Museum
http://www.pcmuseum.ca
On Wed, 11 Jan 2017 16:14:19  -0500, COURYHOUSE at 
aol.com wrote:
  Were C64's used in editing video like  the Amigas
- also need Amiga
 keyboard?
 Were Commodore  64's used  in editing video  like the Amigas  were  to
 any
 extent?
 Looking to  figure if there  is an overlap  area in  yet  another
 area  of
 our  displays  we can do between    computing  and   video production.
 We have a Amiga, 2000 desk  top type,  with a video toaster in it that
 needs a keyboard   and factory mouse!
 Can anyone  help?
 Thanks Ed#   _www.smecc.org_  (
http://www.smecc.org)