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  1. Nov 5, 2009 · Scattered to the left and to the right of the Atari 800 are software cartridges. They plug into the system and give the user instant access to software without loading delays.

  2. Apr 2, 2013 · In 1983 using an Atari 400 computer, I began my long, and still continuing, software development career. Using many sources and my own personal extensive collection (during that last 10 years of hard-core 8-bit collecting), I have comprised a list in hopes that this information remains living for many years to come.

  3. Jun 4, 2020 · Atari 800 vs 800XL: Memory The Atari 800 was much larger than later home computers including the 800XL. Its large size accommodated two cartridge ports, five memory expansion slots, and four controller ports. The XL’s integrated single-board design allowed it to be much smaller and more streamlined. The most important difference between the ...

  4. Subject: 1.3) What is the Atari 800? Released along with the 400 in 1979, the 800 was the high-end model of the two. The 800 is the only 8-bit Atari with a Right Cartridge slot, in addition to the Left Cartridge slot as present on all 8-bit Ataris. Originally released with just 8K RAM, many were sold with 16K, later on 48K was standard.

  5. the Right Cartridge slot of the Atari 800. (80 column editor, compatible with Atari BASIC, and patches available for: OS/A+, EASMD, Letter Perfect v.6, Data Perfect, Atari Logo) - Based on DT-80, the Atari/ATR8000 80-Column Dumb Terminal Emulator. cartridge by Claus Buchholz for Amiable Computer Enhancements, 1984.

  6. Atari 400 / 800 disk vs cartridge. I am still fairly new to the atari computer scene. I have noticed some games are available in both cartridge and disk format. Karateka for example. The cartridge is more expensive so I went with the disk version. Assuming a person has the computer and disk drive is there any preferred format disk vs cartridge?

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  8. The introduction of the 1200XL in 1982 marks the single largest advance in the 8-bit Atari system. The 1200XL runs most software and hardware designed for the 800 and 400, but now runs a slightly more advanced 6502C microprocessor, and includes a full 64K RAM. The single cartridge and monitor ports remain, along with 2 controller ports.

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