In the 1980s TPUG employed a full-time staff to process memberships and to operate its software library and magazine publishing operations. The club became a central clearing house for
freeware for the PET,
VIC-20,
C64, and other Commodore 8-bit computers. Disks and tapes were distributed by mail to a network of associated Commodore user groups across North America and around the world. Jim Butterfield authored much of the original TPUG software library and he continued to distribute new programs through the club. the software library was still maintained, and has been released in its entirety on CD-ROM, though there is little demand for titles for the very oldest machines. TPUG's publishing arm produced a number of print periodicals for internal and external distribution, including the standalone journals
TPUG Magazine (1984–1986) and
TPUG Newsletter (1988–), as well as
TPUG News (1987–1988) which was distributed as an insert in Karl Hildon's magazine
The Transactor. An earlier club magazine,
The TORPET, was produced independently under commercial contract from 1980. In 1984 its owner, Bruce Beach, dissociated the publication from TPUG and relaunched it as an
oceanography journal. TPUG was regularly involved in
Commodore Canada's annual
World of Commodore computer expos since their launch in 1983. The early Toronto-based shows saw attendance of around 40,000, but the series became moribund some years after Commodore's demise in 1994. In 2004 TPUG revived the World of Commodore shows, which continue under their aegis, albeit on a much reduced scale. In its early decades, the club kept in touch with members and associates around the world through its dial-up
bulletin board system, which was programmed and operated by
Steve Punter and Sylvia Gallus. TPUG also maintained a presence on private
online services of the day and eventually the
Internet and
World Wide Web. In the 2000s the club set up a special
web server running on a Commodore 64, and within a week it had received hits from thousands of other Commodore machines. ==Current activities==