Tulip/Compudata Advert - November 1987
From Practical Computing
Tulip: Pick the one that stands out from the rest
To its credit, it took Tulip a good eight years since its founding in 1979 to use the most obvious metaphor in its adverts - a field of actual tulips.
In this case, it goes one step beyond by adding a dodgily-stuck-on red tulip and inviting the viewer to somehow pick the odd one out.
It's also another of those adverts that blatantly fails all sorts of accessibility/readability guidelines, with low contrast and prison bars adding to the visual clutter.
Six years into the era of the IBM PC, and Tulip's machines are following the trends, with a clone of the XT - IBM's first follow-up to its original 5150 PC, plus an AT model and the latest thing - an 80386 PC.
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