BYTE in November 1984 called Agat "a bad copy of the Apple". While stating "my overall impressions were favorable, considering the source", the reviewer found that "the operating system and ROM seemed to be a direct lift from the Apple", the internals were a "nightmarish wire maze", and that performance was noticeably slower than that of a real Apple. He reported that
ELORG planned to sell the computer (with software) for $17,000, and that its officials were "shocked" when told how much computing power that amount of money would purchase in the United States. The reviewer concluded, "it wouldn't stand a chance in today's international market, even if they gave it away. It has neither the polish nor the sophistication to compete". Yuri Rogachyov, one of the key figures in the history of the Soviet computer industry, co-founder of
M-series computers, and head of the Scientific Research Institute of Computer Complexes in 1983—1988, stated that Agat computers were not produced at the time when the
BYTE reviewer arrived in the Soviet Union, and that what he saw during a visit to the
Fyodorov Eye Microsurgery Complex in
Moscow in 1982 was a custom-built
mock-up device intended for testing and debugging medical software, bearing little relation to even the early Agat systems. ==References==