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This guy on this post looks a lot like someone I know...
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Source Code of Several Atari 7800 Games Released! | ProgrammerFish - Everything that's programmed!.
Remember the Dig Dug or Centipede or Robotron? They used to be favorites whe
n Atari’s 7800 series was still around. Now since the era of those consoles is over and a different world of interactive reality gaming has taken over, Atari has unofficially released source code of over 15 games for the coders and enthusiasts to admire the state-of-the-art (because this is what it was back then). During those times nobody would have imagined in their wildest dreams the games that Atari’s developers floated into the gaming thirsty market and instantly swept across continental boundaries. But things changed soon after that and a company once regarded as one of the most successful gaming console manufacturers and developers faded away in the pages of our technology’s hall-of-fame.
In an official release, Atari has quoted that the purpose of the release is to give potential developers insight into the Atari’s gaming platform so they may possibly build upon the 7800 series.
I have collected of the game’s banners:
videoplayer="6848303001"
videoplayer="6863869001" publisherid="987798201" evtrib
playerid="6933821001" videoplayer="6848303001" publisherid="981571769" NewsChannel9
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videoPlayer="6848303001"
videoPlayer="6863869001" publisherID="987798201" evtrib
playerID="6933821001" videoPlayer="6848303001" publisherID="981571769" NewsChannel9
videoplayer="6848303001"
videoplayer="6863869001" publisherid="987798201" evtrib
playerid="6933821001" videoplayer="6848303001" publisherid="981571769" NewsChannel9
Old Brightcove Link
This is a pretty nifty system, que no? Is this even more interesting?
Here's a pretty cool assessment of the science of Back to the Future:
Q.
“Watthew Mrather” writes: The DeLorean can’t go anywhere in space, except in the conventional driving/flying sense. Your [sic] always in the same place you left, but in a different time.
A.
Well, for starters, that’s not a question, “Mr. Mrather,” but I’ll go along with it anyway. Remember, though: without proper punctuation and grammar, we are no better than the animals.
In fact, in order to pull off the kind of time travel we see in the Back To The Future trilogy–the kind where the traveler is transposed in time, but remains stationary in the same relative position to where he/she left–the DeLorean would have to be an outstanding space ship, in addition to its already laudable work as a time-ship. A major issue of freely traveling within time while limiting one’s self to a local reference frame–say, a California mall parking lot–is that the reference frame itself isn’t stationary. As an illustration, let’s figure out how far the DeLorean would have to travel in order to stay in sync with the Earth over a relatively small time-jump. We’ll look at the simplest example (and the first one, diagetically speaking) of the whole BTTF trilogy. You all remember the scene, right? (Spoiler alert: Professor Plum and Alex P. Keaton send a dog one minute into the future.)