AtariWriter

AtariWriter

Screenshot taken of editing "Lorem Ipsum" in AtariWriter
Original author(s) William Robinson
Developer(s) Atari Corp.
Discontinued Version C / 1983
Platform Atari 400/800/XL/XE
Size 16KB
Type Application/Word processor
License Copyright © 1982, 1983 Atari Proprietary software

AtariWriter is a word processing application for the Atari 8-bit computers. It is a 16KB ROM cartridge that works with either a cassette or disk drive for document storage.

Details

Atari's first word processor was Atari Word Processor. This was disk based, required 48KB, was incompatible with the XL computers, and was copy protected but widely copied. A newer product was needed that could run on any of the 8-bit machines, which meant using a cartridge instead of a disk and thereby help solve the piracy issues. Cartridges on the Atari normally held 8KB or less of ROM, requiring a smaller program.

To fill this need, Atari licensed Text Wizard from William Robinson. Robinson originally distributed Text Wizard through Datasoft, but was able to license it to Atari after his deal with that company expired. Gary Furr was the designer and manager of developing the AtariWriter cartridge. Ironically, he wrote the original specifications documents using the original Atari Word Processor on an Atari 800.

AtariWriter was released in 1982 and was a big hit. Furr estimates that 800,000 cartridges were sold over the product's lifetime. It included modern features like automatic word wrap, full-screen editing, dual-column printing, search and replace, undo, block editing and even a print preview feature that allowed users to view a printable page by scrolling across the screen. Printing attributes were set directly into the document using control characters. This allowed direct changes to formatting such as margins, spacing, justification, etc. AtariWriter has only one menu, the main menu, which featured creating and editing documents, file directory, file management and printing.

The cartridge only had built-in printer drivers for Atari printers. Printer drivers for other printers were not available from Atari. However, third-party sources and driver kits were made available. Furr estimates that he sold 10,000 disk-based driver kits through the Atari Program Exchange.

Versions

Reception

The Addison-Wesley Book of Atari Software 1984 gave the software an overall A rating. The book stated that it "heralds a new era in word processing" for Atari 8-bit owners, and "a good reason in itself to purchase an Atari". It praised AtariWriter's ease of use and print preview, and concluded that the software was "a must for every serious writer and Atari owner".[1]

References

  1. Stanton, Jeffrey; Wells, Robert P. Ph.D.; Rochowansky, Sandra; Mellid, Michael Ph.D., ed. (1984). The Addison-Wesley Book of Atari Software. Addison-Wesley. pp. 233–234. ISBN 0-201-16454-X.

External links