Showing posts with label Music Composer. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Music Composer. Show all posts

Monday, May 9, 2016

Late Closing


Bloodhound Ad
U.S. News & World Report
September 6, 1982

The Bloodhound ad for the Atari 400/800 home computers is an advertisement that appeared in the September 6, 1982 issue of U.S. News & World Report magazine. There is also a similar two-page version of the ad, publish location and date unknown to me, as shown below:


The ad features a man, his dog and his Atari 800 home computer with an Atari 810 floppy drive. Strewn about his desktop are the Bond Analysis, Stock Charting and Stock Analysis software packages, all part of the ATARI Investment Analysis Series. Not pictured, but also part of the series is the Mortgage & Loan Analysis software package. All of these software packages are Control Data CYBERWARE products developed for Atari and manufactured under license from Control Data Corporation. There is a short review of Bond Analysis and Stock Analysis on page 33 of the premier issue of ANALOG Computing magazine. Wade Ripkowski over at the Inverse ATASCII Podcast thoroughly researched and meticulously covered the Stock Charting program in Season 1 Episode 10 of his podcast.

Featured at the bottom of the one-page version of the ad or on the second page of the two-page version of the ad are various software packages as well as pictures of the Atari 400 and Atari 800 home computers. Some of the other software packages prominently mentioned in the ad text are examined below.

First up is SCRAM, a nuclear power plant simulation. SCRAM is an educational game program written in Atari BASIC with machine language subroutines. It was programmed by Chris Crawford of Eastern Front (1941) fame. I enjoyed playing this game when I was a kid. It usually took five or six minutes to load from cassette on the Atari 410 Program Recorder. That is if it loaded successfully at all. BEEP...BEEP...BEEP...READY. It sometimes took a few tries to get it working. In this game, it was just as much fun to successfully manage the power plant as is was to lose control of the reactor core and cause a meltdown. This was usually do to an earthquake and loss of one or more of the various water pumps, not unlike the 2011 Fukushima Daiichi nuclear disaster in Japan. SCRAM was shipped on cassette media with an extensive 50 pages almost textbook-like manual. SCRAM, Start Cutting Right Away Man!

ATARI SCRAM by Chris Crawford

Up next is Atari Music Composer which was an early 8K ROM cartridge release in 1979 for the Atari 400/800 home computers. There is an essay on page 85 of the classic 1983 book The Creative Atari titled Atari Music Composer that reviews the cartridge, highlighting it's strengths and perceived weaknesses by a pair of educators.

The ad also features two of the four languages in the Atari Conversational Language Series.  Conversational French and Conversational SpanishThe other two languages in the series are Conversational German and Conversational ItalianThe titles in the Atari Conversational Language series included ATARI's unique ability to mix a voice track on one track of an audio cassette tape with an Atari BASIC program on another track of the same cassette tape. As such, each title was released on cassette tape media and required an Atari 410 Program Recorder and the Atari BASIC language cartridge (or built-in Atari BASIC on later computer models). Each software title was developed for Atari by EMI Audio Visual Services, Ltd. and the Longman Group Publishing Company and came packaged with five audio cassette tapes and a manual/workbook in nice plastic binder. Paul Waxman wrote a informative review of the Atari Conversational Language Series starting on page 28 of the January 1984 issue of Antic magazine.

If you are ready to learn a new language such as Conversational Italian, Brad Koda over at Best Electronics may still have some of these Atari Conversation Language Series titles in stock.

PAC-MAN, a faithful port of the 1980 hit arcade game and 2015 World Video Game Hall of Fame inductee makes an appearance.

Atari PAC-Man Getting Some Screen Time

Centipede, another authentic arcade port based on the 1980 hit arcade game of the same name is also mentioned. Unless you have been living under a magical mushroom for the last thirty years or so, you know that Centipede is a vertical shooter where you must destroy various bugs invading your garden. The Atari computer version uses a joystick instead of the arcade trackball.

The two-page version of the ad has a screenshot of the game Caverns of Mars. Programmed by then teen-aged hobbyist Greg Christensen, this was one of those rare titles that was originally submitted to the Atari Program Exchange and then, because it was so good and sold so well, Atari licensed it and added it to their main catalog, first as a diskette-based product and then later as a cartridge-based product. Caverns of Mars was eventually backported to the hackable Atari 2600-like Atari Flashback 2 console released in 2004.

Rob McMullen over at the Player/Missile Podcast covered Caverns of Mars in Episode 4 of his podcast. You can find additional information in his show notes.

Christensen followed up Caverns of Mars with the similar titles Caverns of Mars II and Phobos.  Then, as Chris Crawford writes in his essay A Grain of Sand, A Gust of Wind in The Journal of Computer Game Design Volume 5 (1991-1992), Greg Christensen went off to college and "disappeared from the gaming scene". Who knows, maybe the guys over at the Antic - The Atari 8-Bit Podcast will track him down one of these days for an entertaining and enlightening interview.

Caverns of Mars, Caverns of Mars II and Phobos by Greg Christensen

Interested in creating new levels for Caverns of Mars? Rob McMullen also created Omnivore, the Atari 8-bit Editor, which can be experimentally used to possibly edit maps of some old Atari 8-bit games. You can find an informative discussion of the editor over on the AtariAge website.

The ad goes on to state that the "..Atari Home Computer systems also take you outside your home, via simple telephone hook-up, with up-to-the financial new and stock quotes..."  By simple, might the ad be referring to the Atari Communicator Kit with the Atari Telelink I cartridge, the Atari 850 Interface Module, the blazing fast (I jest) 300-baud Atari 830 Acoustic Modem (a rebranded Novation CAT product), associated spiderweb of cables, technical manuals and desktop real estate requirements, along with the CompuServe and Dow Jones Information Services ephemera? It was so simple, even dad could figure it out.

Atari's "The Communicator" Kit

There are many other software packages pictured in the ad, and yes, I had to get out a magnifying glass to read some of the titles:  Graph-It, Missile Command, Energy Czar, Stock Charting, Conversational Spanish, Atari Word Processor, Mailing List, Star Raiders, Statistics I, Music Composer. Most of these are early Large-Black-Box format titles, my personal favorite. Two of them, Conversational Spanish and Atari Word Processor are packaged in user friendly binders.    

Compu$erve? Well, that is an expensive story for another day. !GO GAM-105 ... Welcome to MegaWars III.

Saturday, April 30, 2016

Discover What You And Atari Can Do


Creative Arts Ad
Antic Magazine
September 1984
Back Cover

This Creative Arts ad appeared on the back cover of the September 1984 issue of Antic (Volume 3, Number 5) magazine. The ad featured well known television and screen actor Alan Alda, probably best known for his acting work on the long running hit television series M*A*S*H. He is pictured drawing on the Atari Touch Tablet with the AtariArtist software inserted in his Atari XL computer, along with an Atari 1027 Letter Quality Printer and an ATARI 1050 Disk Drive.

Art

Atari Paint allows you to draw on the screen using a joystick. Atari Paint is reviewed on page 106 of issue 16 of ANALOG Computing magazine. The more advanced AtariArtist software, which shipped in cartridge format with the Atari Touch Tablet, allowed you to draw or trace on a kind of electronic slate. The Atari Touch Tablet made drawing and tracing fun and easy. The Atari CX75 Light Pen, styled in the Atari XL series color scheme, let you draw directly on the screen when used in conjunction with the AtariGraphics software package.

The Atari CX75 Light Pen was not Atari's first light pen peripheral. The ill-fated Atari CX70 Light Pen was a thicker, bulkier pen styled in the Atari 400/800 beige color scheme. At some point before becoming available in any quantity, a decision was made to remove the Atari CX70 Light Pen from the market. The reasons for this remain somewhat unclear to this day. Some have indicated that the light pen didn't work correctly on the Atari 400. Others have suggested that the Atari CX70 Light Pen parts were inferior and that the pressure switch built into the pen tip was unreliable.  Still another reported explanation was that the Atari legal department was concerned about the idea of a small kid poking around a television screen with a "big pointy stick". Whatever the ultimate reason, the Atari CX70 Light Pen was short-lived in the market and very few of them actually made it out of the assembly line and shipped to customers. It is now considered a rare collector's item.  

Atari CX70 Light Pen

If you are a Maker and are technically inclined, try building your own light pen for your Atari home computer. See Chapter Six of Electronic Computer Projects For ... Atari Computers or Chapter Nine of Your Atari 8-Bit Comes Alive for detail descriptions of constructing a light pen and wiring it to your computer. Make sure you have an older TV or compatible monitor to test it on thought as it is not likely to work on modern LCD or Plasma TV screens.

Music

Wade Ripkowski over at the Inverse ATASCII Podcast does a great job breaking down the AtariMusic I and AtariMusic II software packages in Season 2 Episode 15 of his podcast. These two educational titles teach you about music. To actually create original music, you could use the Atari Music Composer cartridge, which was a very early release by Atari, shipping in 1979. Jerry White reviewed ATARI Music Composer in the February 1981 issue of Compute! magazine on page 80.

Atari Music Composer Cartridge
Left: Editing Music
Right: Listening To Music

Now you know.  Go create something and discover what you and your Atari home computer can do together.