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Atari’s home computers turn 40

11 points| vontzy | 6 years ago |fastcompany.com | reply

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[+] jmccorm|6 years ago|reply
I'd like to recognize the author for their unexpectedly accurate and complete historical recounting of the Atari 8-bit computer line. Well done! At the same time, I'm a little sad to see this go by without any real discussion on Hacker News. As the article mentioned, the machine had a bit of an identity crisis. Sure, it was a game machine, but it was just as much a hacker's personal playground.

The Atari 8-bit home computer line was a bastion of experimentation and homebrew software development. Free software was everywhere. The A8 was one of the highest clocked 6502-based machines of its day, and that extra processing power was often put to good use. The hardware lent itself unusally well to clever code which could exchange CPU cycles for other benefits such as enhanced sound, resolution, or colors. There were the published hardware specs, and then there were various software-driven enhancements that took the hardware even further.

Many a person (the article's author included) developed their talent for hardware, software, and troubleshooting back in those days. Computers have gotten so much better over the years, but we're still trying to recapture the hands-on learning that was a significant byproduct of this and other classic computing platforms.

Also related, for those who don't recognize Chris Crawford (an Atari employee that was mentioned in the article), you might also recognize his name as the founder of GDC, the Game Developers Conference.