According to Tom's Hardware, Dennis Shaw shared the details of the MiniST in a private Facebook group for Atari ST fans. The initial five-unit production run ...
The Atari 520ST was Atari's first 16-bit salvo in the personal computer wars of the 1980s. A new book by ExtremeTech Editor-in-Chief Jamie Lendino shows the tremendous influence the ST had on both ...
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 ...
An early personal computer series from Atari. Introduced in 1985 to compete with Apple's Mac, the ST was the first home computer to include MIDI musical instrument ports. Popular with musicians ...
We’ve all made rash and impulsive online purchasing decisions at times. For [Drygol] the moment came when he was alerted to an Atari 1040STe 16-bit home computer with matching monitor at a very ...
He even wrote his own software for the task. When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission. Here’s how it works. If there's one thing YouTuber Viktor Bart likes, ...
My father, an electronics engineer by trade, was restless for most of his life. He constantly sought novel experiences, and he often grew bored with gadgets and machines. As a result, he was known to ...
Atari ST programmer and developer Steve Bak died yesterday at the age of 66 after several years of complications with diabetes, according to his son Philip. Bak is perhaps best known as the programmer ...
The world-renowned DJ and producer Fatboy Slim produced his biggest hits on 1980s hardware: an Atari ST 520. We look back.
Jack Tramiel, founder of Commodore International and a major force in the early history of personal computing, died Sunday surrounded by family members, Forbes has reported. He was 83. A Polish ...
GameSpot may get a commission from retail offers. All day Monday we saw "Atari Filing for Bankruptcy" headlines across the Web, accompanied by gushing expressions of nostalgia from anyone over the age ...
Desktop environments are the norm as computer interfaces these days, but there was once a time when they were a futuristic novelty whose mere presence on a computer marked it out as something special.