Commodore's new MD, Kelly Sumner has decided that the company hasn't been doing quite enough to keep us all up to date with what's going on in Amiga Land. To remedy this sad state of affairs a media open day was held m July to introduce the new look Commodore ime-up to all us lovely Amiga journos AMIGA POWER earned brownie pomis for being the only Amiga games magazine to bother to tum up (proof positive that we re the ones who care about keeping you property informed) and we even got a Commodore mug into the bargain The hot news is lhat Commodore are really getting behind CDTV, which they believe >s the luture ol home entertainment. They've jus! launched the A570 - an add-on CD drive lor existing Amiga users. The dtscusson got terribly With regards to CDTV sales to date. Kelly estimates that ‘it s about 15,000. The trade-in seems to have a tremendous effect." Keity confidently predicts sates in the hundreds of thousands in the next couple oi years (but then it s tvs job to be enthusiastic Wee that). There are aboul 290 people developing software for CDTV with over 90 titles currently available. And tor once Commodore are actually working hard lo encourage as many people as possible lo gel mto CDTV development by otfenng deals on kit and software On the games sde, though, things are sk>w to take otf and early efforts like Psycho Killer did nothing to boost our expectations The new games (like CDTV Sports Football and Sherlock Holmes, which we mentioned last month) look pretty impressive at first glance, but we d like the chance to play them ourselves before we rave too much The only other news of interest to AP readers is that the A600 is selling well (with suitably extravagant projections of future sales) and that less than 1.5 percent of them are being returned lor repair (they usually expect closer jo seven or eight percent of their machines to fail).