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Atari 520ST personal computer with SM124 monitor & SF314 floppy drive 1985 (x)
Atari Falcon (1992)
The Atari Falcon030 was unveiled in 1992 and was the last personal computer designed in-house by Atari Corporation. Its name comes from the built-in Motorola 68030 processor.
Hardware
CPU: Motorola 68030, 16 MHz (which was relatively slow even at the time)
DSP: Motorola 56001 DSP chip – one of its most important innovations, running at 32 MHz
RAM: 1 or 4 MB on the motherboard, expandable up to 14 MB
Graphics: up to 65,536 colors (16-bit True Color) at 320×200 resolution, or 256 colors at higher resolutions
Sound: 16-bit stereo audio system with outstanding audio quality thanks to the DSP
Operating System: Atari TOS 4.x (compatible with earlier ST machines)
Why Was It Special?
The DSP chip was its real strength: capable of real-time audio processing, MIDI, sound synthesis, and even audio compression – which was quite rare at the time
It was designed as a multimedia machine and found some success among studios and musicians
It was cheaper than a Mac or PC, yet offered comparable (or better) multimedia capabilities
Problems and Downfall
The 16 MHz CPU speed felt outdated at a time when the Amiga 1200 and PCs were running significantly faster
Atari was struggling with financial difficulties, and marketing and distribution were weak
Few software titles were developed for it, and developers largely ignored it
In 1993, Atari withdrew from the computer market and focused on gaming consoles (the Jaguar)
The Atari ST Turns 40 - Peter Fletcher, Bill Lange
VCF East XX
So no one was gonna tell me that Alan Alda was in
FUCKING ATARI COMMERCIALS???
I have acquired the entire(?) set of 15 thanks to the Internet archive but I'm limited to one video per post so I'll just post a few I find the most interesting/funny and y'all can get the rest for yourself
"When sorcery ruled, and trolls and minotaurs still walked this Earth, a party of six intrepid adventurers set out to find the Nine Rings and use them to destroy the Dark Lord." Phantasie (1985) and Phantasie II (1986), box art for Atari ST versions and title screens, Strategic Simulations, Inc
Ninja Fury! 'Shadow Dancer' Atari ST, Amiga