▲ | joz1-k 3 days ago | ||||||||||||||||
I would even say, that GEM itself saved the Atari ST platform from an instant failure. Apple Macintosh had an original Mac GUI, and the Commodore Amiga (developed by a former Atari team) was technically more advanced in many ways, even supporting a true preemptive multitasking. GEM on Atari ST offered a Macintosh-like UI experience for half the price. | |||||||||||||||||
▲ | lproven 3 days ago | parent | next [-] | ||||||||||||||||
> a Macintosh-like UI experience for half the price The original Macintosh was launched January 1984 for $2,495. The original ST was launched June 1985 for $799. In other words, not half the price -- less than a third of the price. The marketing slogan was "Power without the price" and it was true. Tech was changing faster than now in those days, but even so, the ST was a radical machine. You got a lot for the money. By September 1984 the 512kB "Fat Mac" was launched but it was more expensive: $3,195. Yes, Commodore's contemporary Amiga was more impressive, with better graphics, better sound, better multitasking, but it was $1,285 the month after the ST. Also, a single-floppy 512kB Amiga was not much fun. (Like a single-floppy 128kB Mac!) As the ST's OS was in ROM, a single-floppy 512kB machine was actually quite usable. For both a Mac and an Amiga, you really wanted twin floppies, or better still, a hard disk. | |||||||||||||||||
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▲ | jhbadger 3 days ago | parent | prev [-] | ||||||||||||||||
The nickname of the machine was even "Jackintosh" (from Macintosh and Jack Tramiel, who had left Commodore and then bought Atari's computer division from Warner). At least with the 520ST they really positioned it as a cheap Mac equivilent even bundling it with a monochrome monitor | |||||||||||||||||
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