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The Windows menu provides access to such for each main MIDI data type (all of which the user can position and size within reasonable limits, which values are stored in its configuration file, PREFER683.MTP, found in MTP's installation directory): A Track Editor that can manage up to 64 tracks. Its hideable left half displays global data for ...
The Atari ST was born from the rivalry between home computer makers Atari, Inc. and Commodore International. Jay Miner, one of the designers of the custom chips in the Atari 2600 and Atari 8-bit computers, tried to convince Atari management to create a new chipset for a video game console and computer.
ST Format was a computer magazine in the UK covering the Atari ST during the late 1980s and early 1990s. Like other members of the Future plc Format stable - PC Format and Amiga Format , for instance, it combined software and hardware reviews with columnists, letters pages and a cover disk .
The company developed music software for the Atari ST, Commodore 64, Commodore 128, Amiga, IBM Personal Computer, and Macintosh. [1] It operated until the mid-1990s. [ vague ]
Kick Off was released in 1989.Kick Off was first developed for the Atari ST and then ported to the Amiga. [1] Several expansion disks were released for Kick Off 2.In 1992, Dino Dini left Anco and signed a contract for Virgin Games, which released Goal! in 1993.
Atari's original marketing plan for the 8-bit family of machines, which includes the Atari 400 and 800, was to market the 400 to the education and games sector, and the 800 to small-office settings where CP/M and the Apple II were successful. Unfortunately, the lack of useful business software hindered any sales to the office market, and the ...
DEGAS (D.E.G.A.S., Design & Entertainment Graphic Arts System) is a bitmap graphics editor created by Tom Hudson for the Atari ST and published by Batteries Included in 1985. [1] Hudson created some of the sample paintings that shipped with DEGAS .
SpeedScript is a word processor originally printed as a type-in MLX machine language listing in 1984-85 issues of Compute! and Compute!'s Gazette magazines. Approximately 5 KB in length, it provided many of the same features as commercial word processing packages of the 8-bit era, such as PaperClip and Bank Street Writer.