Karl J.H. Hildon's editorial for this issue supposed "two barrier zones have developed on either side of our fair industry"; "to our far left" was "the general conception that the microcomputer was over"; to the right were those who would eventually join but just not yet. He wasn't sure if "the Atari, the 128, the Amiga" would really be "the next wave," but eventually something would show up, "and we'll be in the middle, or even out in front!" In the meantime, there was a specs-heavy overview of the Atari 520ST (with the editorial caution this didn't mean The Transactor was about to step away from Commodore computers), an article comparing the MOS 6502, the Motorola 6809 (implying Chuck Peddle had "powered down" that chip and not its predecessor the 6800 to create the 6502), and the Motorola 68000, and a different article offering an overview of the Intel 8088. Commodore just happened to now be offering "IBM clones with a difference."