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Platform / Atari 8-Bit Computers

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Atari's answer to the Apple ][ was a pair of computers with graphics and sound above anything else at the time. They were very successful until the Commodore 64 showed up.

They were the first home computers to use custom coprocessors. Jay Miner, who designed the Atari 2600's TIA, headed up the design team for three new chips: CTIA (sprites), ANTIC (text and graphics) and POKEY (sound and I/O). The first models, introduced in late 1979, were the 400 and 800. The 400 was low-end, with 8K or 16K of RAM, no expandability, and a lousy membrane keyboard. The 800 had a good keyboard and up to 48K of RAM. CTIA was soon replaced by GTIA, improving the graphics even more. Both had cartridge ports, and were essentially high-end consoles with computer functionality added on; this reflected their origin as a console to succeed the 2600, which would be realized in the 5200.

They sold well but were expensive to produce. The first redesign was the 1200XL, introduced in late 1982. It had 64K of RAM and a custom version of the 6502. Unfortunately, it was also a mess of unimplemented features, missing internal connections, rearranged ports (breaking hardware compatibility), OS changes (breaking software compatibility) and a high price. It flopped and was quickly discontinued. Meanwhile, the Commodore 64 had arrived, with a price that started low and fell from there.

Atari fixed the 1200XL's problems, and released the redesign as the 600XL and 800XL in late 1983, finally replacing the 400 and 800. (The only difference between the two was memory; the 600XL had 16K, expandable to 64K, and the 800XL was sold with 64K.) They were both very successful, especially the 800XL. Unfortunately, it wasn't enough to cover the losses that threatened to sink Atari (and take down parent company Warner with it) after The Great Video Game Crash of 1983.

Meanwhile at Commodore, founder Jack Tramiel resigned in January 1984 and set up a new company, to make a next-generation computer with the same bang-for-the-buck appeal as the C64; this would become the Atari ST. Warner sold Atari's hardware division to Tramiel in July. Under Tramiel, the 600XL and 800XL were discontinued in 1985. The 800XL was repackaged with an ST-style case as the 65XE, and became the low-end model, alongside the new 130XE, with 128K of RAM. The final member of the family was the XE Games System, a repackaged 65XE, released in 1987 in an attempt to get back into the console market. It went nowhere. The userbase moved on to more powerful machines like the ST, the Commodore Amiga, The Apple Macintosh, and MS-DOS machines.

The Atari 8-bit computers enjoyed greater longevity in Eastern Europe, especially Poland, which may be the only country (?) where commercial Atari games were still released as late as 1994. The Atari 8-bit computer line was formally discontinued worldwide on January 1, 1992.

In January 2024, Retro Games Ltd., the same company behind TheC64 Mini and TheA500 Mini, announced a microconsole version of the Atari 8-bit machines called The400 Mini to be released by the end of March 2024, which will include 25 built-in games, and like its predecessors, the user can upload their own disk and ROM cartridge images as well as update The400 Mini's firmware via a USB flash drive. Despite taking its appearance from the original low-end Atari 400, The400 Mini is capable of emulating the higher end machines as well as the architecturally similar Atari 5200.


Specifications:

Processors

  • CPU: MOS 6502 (400/800) or Atari "Stacy" custom 6502 (XL/XE Series)
  • GPU: Atari ANTIC (graphics coprocessor) and CTIA or GTIA (video display)
  • Sound: Atari POKEY

Memory

  • 400: 8 or 16K
  • 800: 8-48K
  • 1200XL: 64K
  • 600XL: 16-64K
  • 800XL/65XE/XEGS: 64K
  • 130XE: 128K

Display

  • Numerous screen modes, some in hardware, some via software hacks
  • 128 or 256 color palettes
  • 80x192, 160x192, or 320x192 nominal resolution, up to 384x240 with overscan

Sound

  • 4 8-bit channels (which can be combined into either 1 16-bit and 2 8-bit, or 2 16-bit)
  • 3.5 octave range
  • Square or noise waveforms

Games:


Alternative Title(s): Atari 400, Atari 800

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