Catch up on stories from the past week (and beyond) at the Slashdot story archive

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
Games Entertainment

Atari Accuses Journalists of Making Stuff Up So They Produce Recordings of the Interview (theregister.co.uk) 84

An anonymous reader quotes a report from The Register: Legendary games company Atari has accused a Register reporter of making stuff up and acting unprofessionally following an interview earlier this year in San Francisco at the launch of its new games console, the Atari VCS. In that article, we were critical of the fact that the machine did not work, and that its chief operating officer Michael Arzt, whom we spoke to, appeared unable to answer even the most basic questions about the product. We were shown "engineering design models" that were said to be "real" yet turned out did not work, and pointed out as much.

In the article, we wrote: "What happens if we plug this into our laptop, we ask Mike. I don't know, he says. Will it work? I don't know. If we plug it into a different games machine, will it work? No. So it's custom hardware and software? I don't know about that." Presumably this is where Atari feels that the reporter "wrote what he wanted instead of what was discussed with him." Which makes this clip tough to explain -- and we'll give you a clue: your humble Reg hack is the one with the British accent... This is a clip of Atari having no idea about its own controller.
The Register goes on to provide more examples of how Atari "is so full of crap..." The accusations started via the company's Facebook page, where a potential buyer of an Atari VCS posted a link to the Reg article and asked the company to explain it. The full interview between the journalist and Atari can be found here.
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

Atari Accuses Journalists of Making Stuff Up So They Produce Recordings of the Interview

Comments Filter:
  • Wait, wut? (Score:1, Funny)

    by Anonymous Coward
    So you're saying a company COO had no clue as to what was being developed at his own company? Color me shocked, simply shocked.
  • Why even continue with the interview when 3 minutes into it, it's apparent there's going to be no substantive information exchanged? Listening to the 10 clips there was painful. Hard to listen to someone who's supposed to be a COO making up shit / having to cover for lack of any product. At that point you would just save your dignity and end the interview huh?
    • Re:why continue? (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Chris Mattern ( 191822 ) on Friday June 22, 2018 @07:15PM (#56831700)

      Why even continue with the interview when 3 minutes into it, it's apparent there's going to be no substantive information exchanged?

      But there *was* substantive information being exchanged--that Atari was utterly clueless about their own project. Granted, that probably wasn't the information they wanted to impart...

      Listening to the 10 clips there was painful. Hard to listen to someone who's supposed to be a COO making up shit / having to cover for lack of any product.

      That's why being a reporter is paid job--you have to put up with this sort of thing.

      At that point you would just save your dignity and end the interview huh?

      It wasn't the *reporter's* dignity being lost. As far as the Atari COO was concerned, I can only agree with you.

  • by Spasmodeus ( 940657 ) on Friday June 22, 2018 @07:15PM (#56831698)

    The Atari of today has nothing to do with the original Atari that actually made games and computers.

    Atari is now nothing more than a brand name and some IP that has been passed around several times until Infogrames, a French holding company, bought the name in an attempt to capitalize on the good will and nostalgia gamers had for the original brand. What they've really done is dilute that good will even further.

  • Well ... actually ... we don't know, that's why we're [expletive] here.
  • I just don't get why this hasn't been out and on the market for over a year already. This is such a simple product. You can run an emulator on a Raspberry Pi or equivalent. Ideally you put in original joystick ports (use the Stalladaptor or something like that to make them show up on the computer as USB devices). If you really want to bring in the nostalgia crowd, build a cartridge reader that works as a USB flash reader. Outsource it all to Foxconn.

    To really cash in, create a web store where you can l

  • Keep in mind that... (Score:4, Interesting)

    by Pubstar ( 2525396 ) on Friday June 22, 2018 @10:09PM (#56832162)
    Keep in mind that this is the same company that showed "test footage" of Tempest 4000 running on their hardware only to back down when the maker of Tempest 4000 said they never ported the code, let alone even get approached about licensing. Atari backed down later saying it was just the PC version to show what could be running on it. Daily reminder that if its on Indiegogo, its a scam.
    • by mentil ( 1748130 )

      I've purchased a finished product on Indiegogo (and actually received it as advertised). It's not just for crowdfunding, you can also buy finished stuff that's available today.

      • I could have clarified that I meant anything you back as a product not made is a scam. The huge difference between Kickstarter and Indiegogo is that Kickstarter requires a working prototype before you can even ask for funding. Yeah, Kickstarter projects fail, but they require more than a design on a napkin like Indiegogo.
  • by Anonymous Coward

    There's no such thing as 'Legendary games company Atari' anymore.
    It's just various more or less scumbags buying the label, trying to cash out on nostalgia.

  • Atari are only legendary In the same way that dragons and centaurs a re.

  • by Anonymous Coward

    Atari has gone bankrupt and changed owners so many times that viewing them with any nostalgia because they bought the rights to an old companies name is silly. They are not Atari. They are business/finance/scam majors who paid to use Atari's name to fool suckers like you out of some cash by using someone else's legacy.

  • The audio shows the Atari COO not being certain of what a particular engineering board would support as far as working with other off-the-shelf hardware. This is a nothing story. First, the COO is not the CTO or the V.P. of Engineering or the system lead designer. Why would anyone expect the COO to know _anything_ about an engineering prototype?
    • by nasch ( 598556 )

      One wonders, then, why the COO was talking to a reporter about an engineering prototype.

"All the people are so happy now, their heads are caving in. I'm glad they are a snowman with protective rubber skin" -- They Might Be Giants

Working...