Atari 800 XE Laptop
Lester Oats writes "Benjamin J. Heckendorn (of Atari VCSp, NES Micro, & PS2p fame) has been at it again! Summary from his site: "Of all the portable videogame devices I've ever built over the years one system has always been my 'Holy Grail' to make - my 'dream portable' if you will. (Yes, even more so than my Neo Geo arcade machine) And now after a couple years of tinkering it is complete! Without further ado - the Atari 800 XE Laptop!""
I love the error list right by the screen. Windows machines should come with that. Of course, it would need a bigger monitor...
Without further adieu, the site crashed! Here is the mirror.
- Sh!t
Thankfully it hasn't been on Slashdot yet, I'd know as that usually tears my bandwidth a new one.
Poor bastard
A publicly traded company exists solely to make profits for shareholders.
click click
In case this gets slashdotted, here are the main features (from the website):
;) ) an Atari XE GS (Game System) the last model Atari 800 type computer from 1987.
Uses (what's left of
8" TFT active matrix display
Compact Flash "hard disk drive" utilizing MyDOS 4.53 for maximum drive size of 16 megabytes. Card is removable for swapping.
Built-in NiMH battery pack and charger (uses external plug like a normal laptop) Also battery is removable from base as with most laptops.
Full (Atari 800) sized keyboard
Built-in Player 1 & 2 controls, plus joystick ports. Built-in joypads great for playing Robotron 2084!
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Brushed aluminum and wood grain everywhere! A weird combo style, sure, but I like it!
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Cursor control knob - Allows you to move the cursor around the screen without pressing control+arrow keys. That's awesome if you're an old-school Atari programmer "from the day"
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Slim (compared to an original SIO port) DB25 printer-style port for connecting to disk drives, printers or PC's using an SIO2PC cable.
I have to see, it's looking pretty sweet.
Matthew Grint Midnight Artists
Interesting...
;)
and probably the only OS left that doesn't have exploits / virus' targeting it
http://benheck.com.nyud.net:8090/
"City hall" in German is "Rathaus" Kinda explains a few things......
Even the 8-bit Ataris supported hard drives with later versions of DOS (I always liked SpartaDOS personally). The flash is just an adapter that makes the CF show up as a standard HD to the Atari. Nothing too terribly fancy there. And it only makes sense that an Atari would support its own DOS ;)
These days you can even get ethernet and an IDE adapter for the things (though not cheaply).
"MyDOS 4.53 for maximum drive size of 16 megabytes"
I had an atari back in the day with a 15gig drive using a scsi to mfm controler... so I imagine with the right hardware anything ide could be supported. I recently saw an "ICD multi-io" with scsi and 1meg sold on ebay for $700ish. While the ram wasn't an expantion it could act as a printbuffer or ramdisk and was powered seperatly so it acted like a small hard drive. That's there and abouts of what they cost new in 1990 or so. Atari dos near as I'm aware never supported anything above and beyond 360k or 720k floppies... the largest drive Atari them selves came out with was 360k drive called an XF-551.
I got the atari when the whole atari dos thing went crazy. You had atari dos 2.0 which supported only 90k floppies, but then they came out with some odd ball enhanced density dos which but shipped with atari dos 3 which wasn't compatable the old disks... not even the discs that shipped with the drive. It had a utility that would convert old disks to the new format... but not back again which was a problem as most disks that were shipped employed copy protection... so atari dos3 had a nice feature to render disks totally unreadable. And the only reason anyone knew this is if they had access to a handy dandy user's group... it's not like the places that sold them actually were able to support them.
Eventaully I was able to get the newer dos 2.5 which was compatable with the new enhanced density yet could read the older single dos 2.0 disks... which was the standard of all boxed software. Most annoying was when they released a double sized double density drive and didn't ship it with a version of dos that supported it. Probally the most interesting were the various other DOSes that were on the market including SpartaDOS and MyDOS both of which could support hard drives and just about any disk standard available.
There was lots of really good hardware for the Atari... the problem is that most games didn't support anything above a single drive, and those that did only used flippable disks and didn't allow you to say copy side B to another floppy and run the game flipless.
There is no sanctuary. There is no sanctuary. SHUT UP! There is no shut up. There is no shut up.
Now that is cool, moving him to a dedicated server so his site survives the Slashdotting. /me notes you guys down if he needs hosting in the future.
It's better to vote for what you want and not get it than to vote for what you don't want and get it.
- E. Debs
It was done in 1983, you can get one for about $50-$100 on Ebay. See:
http://oldcomputers.net/sx64.html
Be fair dude - this is $7.95 a month web hosting in a shared environment, with set limits (and very generous they are too for the price). If you bought a car would you be surprized that it doesn't go as fast as an airplane?
;-)
I called Ben up and said he had two options - suspension for going over bandwidth, or quick hack to keep the pictures up until we can work out a better solution.
So, we hacked him on to an empty machine, and will work out a dedicated server for him soon so that this can't happen again.
Last time he got slashdotted, he used over 130Gb of transfer in 24hrs (actually, for the first 3hrs we had a suspended page, so it would have been even more if we'd done this before (we left him on the host last time and watched the load *very* closely).
No warning this time either, hence quick hack. By the time he next gets slashdotted, we'll have a solution in place so that we don't need to do this again.
cLive
ps - still damn funny point though.
-- Trinity in high heels carrying a whip: The donimatrix - there is no spoonerism