Forty years after its launch, the Commodore Amiga is celebrated not just as a PC pioneer but as the canvas for Andy Warhol’s groundbreaking digital art experiments. Warhol’s live 1984 portrait of Debbie Harry at the Amiga’s debut event marked the dawn of accessible creative computing, a legacy almost lost until floppy disks resurfaced in 2014. This moment underscores how the Amiga democratized art, music, and multimedia—decades before today’s tools.