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One of my favorite RPGs on the Atari 8-bit platform was Ultima III: Exodus. Its arrival on the ST, refreshed with a new graphical user interface, gave me reason to play and solve it again.
See Atari. A Lot of Praise Joe Sugarman, the marketer famously known for his astute product descriptions, praised the ST in this full-page ad for his JS&A mail order company in 1986.
The license at that time cost $10 per seat, which would have allowed Atari to sell a version of Unix to the general public and, if you extrapolate out a bit, would have made it a dominant end-user ...
Break out the birthday cake and your MIDI cables, because the Atari ST turned 40 this summer. Launched in 1985 as Atari’s answer to what was next in home computing, the 16-bit micro was part games ...
If you aren’t familiar with the Atari ST, it was a line of 68000-based home computers available from 1985 to 1993.
Posted in Retrocomputing Tagged atari st, ATW800, fpga, inmos, Mega-ST, Tang 20k, transputer, VME ← Inside Starlink’s User Terminal Smart Terrarium Run By ESP32 → ...
For the second time in roughly a year, St. Louis-based video game developer Graphite Lab has reached a publishing deal with gaming giant Atari for a game it has developed.
Even Mr. Bart, however, was surprised by what he found in Koningsbosch, in the Dutch province of Limburg: a campsite that's been run since 1986 on an Atari ST.
8mhz/512kB Atari ST, equipped with a hard drive (2.5 free MB required) STE/F030 users will get digitized sound effects ST users will get old-fashioned bleep-blops Galactic Panic features ─ a no-budget ...