Infogrames Officially Changes Name To Atari 48
According to this story from Reuters via Yahoo News, Infogrames is now officially changing its name to Atari worldwide. The French publisher originally picked up the home rights to the Atari name after buying Hasbro Interactive in 2001, and had recently been rebranding much of its line-up (even PC RPGs) with the Atari logo alongside the Infogrames one. Lovable French ruffian and Atari CEO Bruno Bonnell will open the Nasdaq stock exchange on Wednesday morning to herald the new ATAR stock ticker symbol for the company.
Re:Atari? (Score:3, Informative)
*see classicgaming.com for an interesting history lesson*
No atari t-shirts? (Score:3, Insightful)
On a side note, the slashdot guys couldn't have chosen an uglier color scheme for the games [slashdot.org] section of the site?
Re:No atari t-shirts? (Score:3, Informative)
while at the alternative-party they gave away atari shirts(they had atari/infogrames as sponsor) as prizes. funny thing was that there was this one infogrames employee who attended(and won one competition, and got a tshirt among other things) and when rewarded told that he had tried to get an atari t-shirt for a long time but couldnt g
Re:No atari t-shirts? (Score:2, Interesting)
Get them here (Score:3, Informative)
Instant fix for slashdot freakiness... (Score:2)
2. Click on the little icon that switches the view into "User mode" - 3rd icon from the left.
--Not perfect, but it works.
No More PC clones and Consoloputers, Please (Score:1, Offtopic)
Atari rises from its ashes... again (Score:1)
ever played Doom with respawn...
not so bad for a company that since jaguar has vintage t-shirt as core businness
PA (Score:2)
The Incarnations of Atari (Score:5, Interesting)
apologies in advance... (Score:3, Funny)
Imagine a beowulf cluster of Transputers [atarimuseum.com]!
Re:The Incarnations of Atari (Score:2)
Hmmm...my understanding was that Jack had always said that he'd sell the company when it hit $10 million (or some such figure) because it would be too big to be any fun, so it did and he did.
Re:The Incarnations of Atari (Score:1)
Sewers of Rivendell??? (Score:2)
Re:The Incarnations of Atari (Score:2)
Re:The Incarnations of Atari (Score:3, Informative)
In researching this timeline, I made a truely mind-boggling discovery: Atari was briefly in the engineering/scientific/graphics workstation business [atarimuseum.com]!
Yep, They also made unsuccessful PC clones at one point. Tramiel's Atari tried lots of things that ultimately failed. They didn't have the resources to pull them off.
Also, in the Warner days, Atari was rumored to
Re:The Incarnations of Atari (Score:1)
Online brains (Score:2)
It's not just resources. Selling brand-name clones requires huge economies of scale and strong marketting savvy. Every proprietary system maker has tried to switch over at one point or another. (The latest was SGI, just a couple years ago.) The only successes I can think of are HP and of course IBM itself.
I'm okay with this. (Score:5, Insightful)
EVER.
Trying to hide shame behind a proud name (Score:4, Insightful)
Now, Atari -- I still have my Atari ST downstairs, and from time to time I plug it in, boot it and cry a little over the clean, crisp picture on the screen, the ease of use, and how unfair the world in general is. I could even do uucp with that machine, and if it only had had a MMU...and if only IBM hadn't bought MS DOS...if only pigs could fly...
Shame, shame, shame on Infogrames for dragging Atari down into the muck with them. Of course, it won't help: The Brits tried renaming their continuous disaster of a nuclear plant "Windscale" [betterworldlinks.org] to "Sellafield" (or vice versa, I keep forgetting) but that didn't fool people one bit.
Re:Trying to hide shame behind a proud name (Score:3, Interesting)
I suspect it has a lot more to do with appearing to be less French to the American game market. The country-wide unspoken, unorganized boycott of things appearing to be too French is really hurting French businesses. Not fatally, but it's leaving a mark. Just seems strange when they out of the blue ta
Re:Trying to hide shame behind a proud name (Score:1)
The name "Atari" is actually Japanese, I think. It was taken from the game, "Go".
I also recall seeing a Japanese movie on MST3K where one of the characters was "Mr. Atari".
Re:Trying to hide shame behind a proud name (Score:1)
Re:Trying to hide shame behind a proud name (Score:1)
Second, MOO3 is GREAT (to me). There's a high learning curve (in that you have to get your mind into the system) - but it's incredibly fun in it's current incarnation. Sure, i'll get the code patch when it comes out - but i love this game even without the data patch that's already out.
Lots of people gave, what seems to me, instant reactions to a hard core strategy game. But if you spend som
Re:Trying to hide shame behind a proud name (Score:2, Insightful)
Now, Atari -- I still have my Atari ST downstairs, and from time to time I plug it in, boot it and cry a little over the clean, crisp picture on the screen, the ease of use, and how unfair the world in general is. I could even do uucp with that machine, and if it only had had a MMU...and if only IBM hadn't bought MS DOS...if only pigs could fly...
Ease of use? I always found Atari's GEM implementation hopelessly frustrating, at least if you wanted to do anything more than launch programs.
Still, if y
In other news... (Score:2)
A slap in the face... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:A slap in the face... (Score:2)
Boy, you never owned an Atari ST, did you?
Re:A slap in the face... (Score:2)
Speaking of old Atari ROMs: it will be interesting to see
Re:A slap in the face... (Score:2)
Re:A slap in the face... (Score:2)
Re:A slap in the face... (Score:2)
They should really produce side-scrolling games. (Score:3, Interesting)
I'm happy about the reincarnation of this brand name, now I just hope they dont just run blindly after technologies like ID software, and stick to some old Atari style games. Theres definitely a market and the brand name is well respected. People miss it.
Re:They should really produce side-scrolling games (Score:1)
Yeah, but... (Score:1)
Re:Yeah, but... (Score:2, Funny)
Ooh look! A little dot! *raises neck and makes meowing-like noises*
Well, somebody's gotta say it! (Score:1)
Just let it die already. The glory days of Atari are way past gone...
Re:Well, somebody's gotta say it! (Score:2)
Are they finally figuring it out? Or not? (Score:2, Interesting)
Hasbro figured out it couldn't make video games so they dumped EVERYTHING. For a million cash and a bunch of now worthless stock, Infogrammes tied up the electronic rights to EVERY Hasbro property for nigh on fifteen years (that's Wizards of the Coast (TSR and all), Avalon Hill, Transformers, etc.).
I wouldn't be so irritated if they exploited these brands properly. However, up until this point Info
Brand Recognition (Score:2, Insightful)
Just curious (Score:1)
Re:Just curious (Score:1)
What the hell? (Score:2)