qertlist.blogg.se

Atari800macx
Atari800macx





atari800macx

They probably came from other sources that aren’t searchable, like the ACE-St. I don’t think the other three are original programs.

#ATARI800MACX CODE#

WAV format since it is a lossless format and wouldn’t distort the data.Ī page from “The best of ANTIC: an anthology” containing the Drop program.īy searching Google for snippets of code from each program, I was able to identify 7 of the 10 programs as type-in listings in various Compute! and ANTIC magazines and books. I carefully played back each side of the tape and recorded the audio in Amadeus Pro. I grabbed a boombox cassette player and connected its headphone jack to the auxiliary input on my Mac Pro. I would print these on an Atari 825 dot-matrix printer, which I had proudly purchased from A-Z Used Computers with my own money. As a kid, I wrote lots of stories and essays for school in AtariWriter. I thought stories might be another possibility. At that time I was doing some rudimentary BASIC programming at school on Apple II computers. I used the Atari 8-bits most heavily while I was in elementary school and junior high. I hoped it might be my own original programming. Alas, I got rid of most of it when I was in college.īut here was this little tape … perhaps my only tangible link to my old Atari 8-bit equipment.Įach side of the tape was only 10 minutes long. Last weekend, I was rummaging through my old Atari ST disks when I came across something I hadn’t noticed in 30 years: A cassette tape for my Atari 8-bit.Īs I have recounted before, I used hand-me-down Atari 800s, a 130XE, a 410 program recorder, and lots of other equipment and disks from family members when I was a kid before later graduating to the 16-bit ST series. Side 1 of an old cassette tape I used to store programs for my Atari 8-bit computers.







Atari800macx