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- Newsgroups: comp.sys.atari.st
- Path: sparky!uunet!mnemosyne.cs.du.edu!nyx!jyoung
- From: jyoung@nyx.cs.du.edu (Jeff Young)
- Subject: NEW Atari Falcon news
- Message-ID: <1992Jul28.053740.6506@mnemosyne.cs.du.edu>
- Sender: usenet@mnemosyne.cs.du.edu (netnews admin account)
- Organization: Nyx, Public Access Unix at U. of Denver Math/CS dept.
- References: <9207251846.AA13804@boa.cis.ohio-state.edu> <1992Jul26.065824.28097@msuinfo.cl.msu.edu>
- Date: Tue, 28 Jul 92 05:37:40 GMT
- Lines: 196
-
- Here is lots of new about Falcon!..
-
- IN SEARCH OF THE ATARI FALCON 030
-
- Even though no official word is available, even though Atari has
- maintained a lid on details, and even though some leaks claim that the
- new computer to be unveiled this fall won't bear the name FALCON, the
- rumor mill has provided ample pseudo-information on what is expected to
- be a remarkable machine.
-
- Atari held an invitation-only Falcon developer conference in London on
- June 27th, attended by over 120 developers. Sam Tramiel, Bill Rehbock,
- and John Skruch were among those attending the conference for Atari. In
- addition to the Atari personal, a few experts were brought along to
- discuss features of the Falcon and programming the Digital Signal
- Processor. Reactions from the intense one day affair varied from the
- positive to the wildly enthusiastic. A number of the developers that
- attended are not currently working on Atari platforms, but the
- demonstrations and discussions appear to have convinced all of them to
- either reconsider their position or to immediately add Atari to their
- development programs.
-
- Sam Tramiel has planned to reveal the Falcon technical details in live
- conferences on the GEnie and Delphi telecommunications networks in early
- August. This will be in preparation for the huge Dusseldorf Atari Messe
- ("fair") in Germany, August 21-23, where the public should see the
- Falcon for the first time. Commercial availability for the units is
- projected for later this fall.
-
- A first look almost came early, through the efforts of Atari Advantage
- Magazine. An exclusive Falcon story, complete with photographs of the
- outside and even the motherboard of the Falcon, was planned for their
- June issue. However, delays in production caused that issue to become
- the June/July issue, and then negotiations with Atari Corp regarding
- non-disclosure matters caused the photographs to be dropped and the
- printing to be further delayed until late July. The photographs will
- instead be featured in an upcoming issue of Atari Explorer (see related
- story, below). The Atari Advantage Falcon article remains generally
- complete, and is recommended reading, even getting "thumbs up" from
- Atari officials. The Falcon issue should be available at Atari dealers
- well into August.
-
- Speculative Specs
-
- The Falcon 030 (it may still be called something else when released, but
- this name is now seeming to stick) will feature a 68030 running at
- 16mHz, be in the 1040-style one piece cabinet, and feature "more colors
- than you can see, more sounds than you can hear", and use a Motorola
- Digital Signal Processor DSP 56001 (like in NeXT). It will have an
- updated TOS operating system that will include MultiTOS multitasking.
- That much is official. The rest is via leak and speculation, and as
- such, subject to change.
-
- MultiTOS was developed by ATARI Corp. in cooperation with Eric Smith of
- the Mathematics Department at the University of Western Ontario. Eric
- designed the multitasking kernel called MiNT, which forms the basis for
- MultiTOS, a combination of ROM code in the TOS and extensions on disk.
- Message pipelines exist between parallel running applications, allowing
- controlled interaction of simultaneous processes in different windows.
- Old-standard desk accessories now unnecessary due to CPX modules and the
- ability to run programs simultaneously, in effect, making every
- application work like an accessory. Under MultiTOS, if one of many
- parallel running applications should crash, the others remain protected
- and safe. A more limited version of MultiTOS for older ST computers is
- expected to be available as software.
-
- According to the Atari Advantage Falcon story, the Falcon case will be a
- dark grey, similar to the color of the Portfolio and STacy. It will
- feature an STe/TT compatible LAN port plus and industry standard SCSI II
- peripheral port, stereo microphone and headphone jacks, STe extended
- joystick ports, a DSP port, and a built-in speaker. This last item is
- important as the Falcon will be able to use standard high resolution
- color multisync monitors which typically have no audio. Older Atari
- monitors will also be usable with an adaptor. Broadcast quality TV
- compatible video is offered with built-in genlock and "true color"
- 32,768 color capacity plus a variety of other modes (including all ST
- modes).
-
- Sound? Yikes. Sixteen-bit digital record/playback in resolution up to
- 50 kHz (better than an audio CD) in up to eight channels, with direct-
- to-hard-disk recording, with a DSP port allowing digital audio transfer
- rates of up to a megabyte per second. And STe 8-bit and ST three-voice
- sound will be supported, making the Falcon as close to 100% backwards
- compatible as possible.
-
- Also in the copyrighted Advantage article are observations of on-board
- sockets that appear ready for addition of alternate CPU devices, such as
- PC or MAC emulators. With the dramatic speed and PC compatible video,
- emulation should be a snap. Other internal items included a fan and an
- internal hard disk--a 2.5" 40 meg unit in the one Advantage cracked
- open. A daughter board held 16 meg of RAM in a plug-in module.
-
- Price? It is rumored that the Falcon 030 will start at under $700.
-
-
- ATARI EXPLORER TAKES ADVANTAGE
-
- Atari Advantage has ceased publishing operations after only three
- issues, as the publisher and editor have been hired to take over
- production of Atari's in-house magazine, Atari Explorer. Mike Lindsay
- and Darren Meers are relocating to Sunnyvale to pilot the glossy bi-
- monthly Explorer after their short but well-received stint producing
- their own Atari magazine. According to Lindsay, many subscriptions were
- either not billed or charged in anticipation of the move. Paid
- subscribers will be given options on conversion to a subscription to
- Atari Explorer.
-
- Lindsay and Meers were part of ST-INFORMER for four years, and both left
- Informer in January 1992 over a dispute regarding ownership and control.
- Their own magazine, Atari Advantage, had established a respectable
- circulation, but Atari Corp. elected not to bring Advantage in-house as
- an additional magazine.
-
- The naming of editorial staff for Explorer ends months of conjecture
- about who would take over for John Jainschigg. John declined to move to
- Sunnyvale from his New York offices where he produced Explorer for the
- last two years.
-
- Bringing Atari Explorer to the home offices is part of an overall
- consolidation of executive effort and attention at Atari. Overseeing
- the magazine operation will be Atari's Bernie Stolar.
-
-
- LYNX GOES WEST
- As Atari gears up for the Jaguar game console to be released in 1993,
- the Lombard Illinois offices of Atari Entertainment are being relocated
- to Sunnyvale. Home of the Lynx development team, Lombard will remain
- open as a programming center, but sales, marketing, and support for the
- Lynx and soon the Jaguar will be part of the California operation under
- the guidance of Bernie Stolar. Leaving Atari are Larry Seigal and Dana
- Plotkin, who did not wish to relocate.
-
-
- ATARI IN FORBES
- The August 3, 1992 issue of Forbes Magazine recounts the Atari story in
- a two-page article called "Cheap Didn't Sell" by Dyan Machan. The famed
- business/industry reporting magazine blames Atari's troubles on the
- Tramiel family's penny pinching. Machan claims that second-quarter 1992
- financial statements (unavailable at press time) will be far worse than
- the first quarter when Atari lost $14 million on $44 million in sales.
- Further, the article says that Jack Tramiel has personally taken over
- day-to-day operation of the company, moving his son Sam out of his
- former office. The article does mention the new line of Falcon
- computers and the Jaguar game console, but speculates that Atari has
- less than half of the cash needed to perform an appropriate roll-out of
- the new products. Atari officials aren't happy with the Forbes
- article's tone, but some observers are saying, "Any press is more press
- than we have had. A lot of readers will discover that Atari is not
- dead, at least."
-
-
- NEW SUPERBASE COMING
- Superbase database systems for the Atari have been acquired by Oxxi Inc.
- who now offer upgrades for the popular line of software. The charge to
- upgrade either version of Superbase Personal to SB Pro 3 is $85,
- available only through Oxxi. The upgrade includes full product, manuals
- and all. A new product, Superbase 4, is expected in the near future.
- Oxxi Inc., P.O. Box 90309, Long Beach, CA 90809-0309, USA, FAX (310)
- 427-0971.
-
-
- NEW HOST BRINGS CD, FLOPTICAL TO ATARI
- ICD Inc. has announced a new host adaptor that will enable standard ST
- computers to use industry standard SCSI devices, including hard drives,
- CD ROM drives, and flopticals designed for IBM, MAC, and Amiga. Pricing
- has not been announced, but "The Link" will be a self-powered molded
- cable-box affair that will connect to Atari's DMA (ACSI) port and plug
- directly to standard 50-pin centronics style SCSI ports, giving instant
- and complete access to virtually any peripheral using SCSI, with up to 8
- devices at one time being supported. Better yet, MS-DOS formatted
- devices will read and write directly and transparently from the ST
- without modification, using ICD's driver software. CD-ROMs are now
- supported through The Link's extended SCSI commands, with a re-written
- MetaDOS driver to support the SCSI-2 standard for CD-ROM players. The
- ICD Link will be premiered at the Atari Messe in Dusseldorf, Germany in
- August. ICD is taking orders now with shipments expected in mid-August.
- For further information, contact Thomas Harker at ICD by phone (815)
- 968-2228 extension 120, or FAX (815) 968-6888.
-
-
- CD's, PHOTOS, AND ATARI
- Atari's been dodging the CD-ROM technology for almost three years, and
- now it looks like the wait might pay off. New CD technology is becoming
- available that makes most older disk players obsolete. The Kodak Photo
- CD system provides a way for consumers to have their color photographs
- printed to a CD in resolutions exceeding all but the most sophisticated
- computers and monitors. But the new format can't be read by many
- current CD player drives. The new system is called Mode 2, XA, multi-
- session capable. If you are buying a CD ROM, look for those
- specifications to preserve your value. New format drives might be
- readable using the ICD LINK (see story above) or by using ICD's revised
- MetaDOS on a TT or Falcon.
-
-
-
-
-