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- ANTIC PUBLISHING INC.,COPYRIGHT 1986. REPRINTED BY PERMISSION.
-
- ANTIC'S EUROPEAN REPORT
- PART TWO: WEST GERMANY AND FRANCE
- BY GIGI BISSON, ANTIC ASSISTANT EDITOR
-
- (Antic Publisher James Capparell recently returned from a
- one month tour of computer shows in Europe. This is the
- second installment in our three-part report.
-
- HANOVER, WEST GERMANY -- No hype. It's the largest
- computer trade show in the world. CeBIT -- even grander
- than the mighty COMDEX. (CeBIT is a German acronym for
- World Center for Office, Data and Communications
- Technology.) During the week of March 12, the annual show
- in Hanover, West Germany boasted 2,100 exhibitors spread
- throughout 205,000 meters of display area in 13 buildings.
- Atari Corp. was in building 13, but this time it was a
- lucky number.
-
- "We've been hearing that the Atari ST is now the largest
- selling computer in Germany, but I never believed it until
- I saw this show," says Antic Publisher James Capparell.
- Every significant hardware and software organization from
- Atari to IBM was at the Hanover show, including 102
- exhibitors from the U.S. and exhibitors from countries that
- aren't often associated with high technology, such as
- Czechoslovakia, Yugoslavia, Hungary and South Africa.
-
- Atari Germany spared no expense at their lavish booth.
- The center of the vast display was almost a restaurant in
- itself, tempting dealers and retailers with rich food,
- German Beer and fine chocolates. At the perimeter were
- nearly 50 third-party developers, including Antic. The
- exhibitors showed many of the same products that had been
- unveiled the previous week at an Atari show in London.
-
- At a Hanover press conference, Atari announced the
- MS/DOS box, 20 megabyte hard disk drive, 1040ST computer
- and 520ST+ computer. Atari also spoke of their commitment
- to upward compatiblity, pledging that all future plug-in
- peripherals and add-ons will be compatible with all
- versions of ST hardware. Atari engineers are working on a
- 1,000 X 1,000 pixel color monitor for CAD/CAM purposes,
- with a companion hardware expansion unit capable of driving
- that resolution on the ST. Atari hopes to keep the price
- down to $1,000. Atari Corp.'s $49.95 CP/M operating
- system emulator software is not yet available in the U.S.,
- but apparently it is already in use in West Germany.
- (CP/M, one of the earliest microcomputer operating systems,
- is used by the Osborne and Kaypro computers.)
-
- German computer magazines are already advertising CP/M
- software for the ST. In 68000er magazine, there are
- advertisements for Micro Pro Wordstar 3.0 "fur den Atari
- ST." The software is in ST 3 1/2 inch disk format and
- requires the CP/M emulator. Another German magazine
- featured a review of Borland International's Turbo Pascal
- running on the ST with CP/M emulation.
-
- Antic picked up copies of several German computer
- magazines covering the ST, including Happy Computer, ST
- Computer, Level 16, and 68000er -- a magazine devoted to
- 68000-based Atari ST, Apple Macintosh and Commodore Amiga.
- Antic made arrangements to exchange programs and articles
- with some of these publications.
-
- A few of the new products on display:
-
- * RDS software unveiled, SideClick, an ST clone of
- Borland International's Sidekick.
-
- * A printed circuit board CAD development package,
- including a plotter driver.
-
- * A full MIDI software package driving a Yamaha DX-7
- synthesizer.
-
- * Many of the products were business software packages
- written to German business standards, and thus impractical
- for U.S. use.
-
- * Firebird, the firm that developed The Pawn graphic
- adventure game for the ST, discovered a way to decrease
- loading time, and they plan to incorporate this technique
- in future releases. Antic also saw several German
- developers that had found ways to speed up disk loads.
-
- * A bar-code printer and reader for the ST, compiled and
- interpreted BASIC languages.
-
- * A scientific lab data acquisition system, and a system
- that enables users to download weather satellite
- information with the ST.
-
- * Metacomco will port a full implementation of Cambridge
- LISP to the ST, slated for a Fall release.
-
- * Paperlogic introduced an ST Toolbox that included a
- MS-DOS-like shell and sells for under $40.
-
- * Abacus Software displayed a Printed Circuit Board CAD
- design system that was nearly in the Beta stage.
-
- Many companies were capitalizing on the ST's MIDI
- interface with musical software. The most intriguing
- exhibit featured an Analog to Digital/Digital to Analog
- (AD/DA) workstation, comprised of $15,000 worth of hardware
- powered by an ST.
-
- VIVE LE ATARI
-
- And finally, at the end of an exhausting tour, Paris,
- for the first Atari-exclusive show ever held in France.
- The show featured 50 developers, most were French.
-
- In France, Antic saw some fantastic artwork created with
- DEGAS and NEOchrome, and hopes to make arrangements with
- the artists to publish this work in future issues of Antic.
- But the star of the show was a professional architectural
- CAD-CAM system from a Netherlands firm.
-
- Andromeda Software, a Hungarian firm with offices in
- the United States, showed two graphic tools fro the ST, The
- Animator, a graphic animation package and a picture
- processor. Andromeda is also working on ST versions of the
- classic Atari arcade games Missile Command, Battlezone and
- Millipede.
-
- The trip verified both Atari's commitment to worldwide
- ST marketing, and the world's commitment to Atari.
- "Everywhere we went in Europe, I was surprised to meet
- Antic readers with complimentary things to say," says Antic
- publisher Capparell. "Antic and Atari have friends around
- the world."
-
- NEXT: Antic's European Report, Part Three: Andromeda
- Software's ST Animation System.
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