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Iconic Atari Turns 40, Tries To Stay Relevant

Atari

BARBARA ORTUTAY   06/29/12 11:33 PM ET EDT  AP

NEW YORK — A scruffy, young Steve Jobs worked at Atari before he founded Apple. "Pong," one of the world's first video games, was born there, as was "Centipede," a classic from the era of quarter-guzzling arcade machines. "Call of Duty" creator Activision was started by four of Atari's former game developers.

The iconic video game company turns 40 years old this week, much slimmer these days as it tries to stay relevant in the age of "Angry Birds" and "Words With Friends."

But Atari's influence on today's video games is pervasive.

Although it wasn't the first company to make video games, Atari was the first to make a lasting impression on an entire generation. At arcades – or at video game bars such as Barcade in the trendy Williamsburg section of Brooklyn – nostalgic patrons still gather around such Atari classics as "Asteroids," "Joust" and "Centipede."

The Atari 2600, launched in 1977, was the first video game console in millions of homes, long before the Nintendo Entertainment System (1985), Sony's PlayStation (1994) and Microsoft's Xbox (2001).

Today's younger iPhone gamers might not remember how "Pong," that simple, two-dimensional riff on Ping-Pong, swept across living rooms and arcades in the 1970s. But they might recognize elements of it in easy-to-learn, hard-to-master games based on simple physics – among them, "Angry Birds."

"For tens of millions of Gen X-ers, or kids who grew up in America in the `70s and `80s, Atari is a cultural icon, an intrinsic part of childhood," says Scott Steinberg, tech analyst and author of "The Modern Parent's Guide to Kids and Video Games."

"Pong," he adds, was in some ways the very first social video game, one designed to play in bars, at home or at an arcade, while spectators crowded around to watch the action.

Launched in 1972 from Atari's Silicon Valley headquarters, "Pong" featured a basic black-and-white screen (that's black and white only, no shades of gray here), divided by a dotted line. Short white lines on either side stood in for paddles. Two players controlled them and tried to get a moving dot – the ball – past their opponent.

With "Pong," Atari introduced video games to the masses just as Apple and Microsoft ushered in the personal computer era by bringing computers to people's desktops in the 1980s.

"It makes me think that I am getting really old," says Nolan Bushnell, the co-founder of Atari. "I'm 69, which means I was 29 when I founded Atari. It seems really young in retrospect."

It doesn't take much effort these days to see 20-something entrepreneurs in technology. Mark Zuckerberg was just 19 when he started Facebook in his Harvard dorm room. But back in the early `70s, Bushnell said, "no one in their 20s started companies. In some ways it paved the way for Apple, Microsoft and those guys."

Bushnell said Atari succeeded early on because it nurtured ideas from its engineers and computer programmers.

"We dominated not because of our manufacturing and marketing prowess but because of creativity," Bushnell says. "The lasting legacy: That creativity is a real weapon. And in some ways Apple has shown that as well."

Jobs was just 19 when Atari hired him as a technician, making $5 an hour. He worked the night shift because many of his co-workers didn't get along with him and didn't appreciate his refusal to wear deodorant, according to Walter Isaacson's recent biography of the late Apple chief executive.

He wasn't there for long – he left the company in 1974 to travel to India and co-founded Apple two years later, in 1976.

Dona Bailey, one of the creators of "Centipede," recalls a notebook that Atari had with maybe 30 ideas for games in it.

"Most of them were laser games," says Bailey, who was the only female programmer in Atari's arcade division when she was hired in 1980 and when she left in 1982. "I wasn't really interested in war, or lasering anything, or violence."

The only ideas in the notebook that didn't have to do with "lasering things or frying things" were two sentences about a multi-segmented insect that walks out on the screen and winds its way down the screen toward the player, she says. There was implicit shooting, as the player at the bottom had to destroy the insect before getting hit by it, but "it didn't seem that bad to shoot a bug."

Thus, "Centipede" was born.

Atari, Steinberg says, pioneered a lot of the concepts that are popular in gaming today: Games should be for both men and women, and they should be social by allowing many people to compete with each other.

Atari "defined games as not just a product but a social movement," Steinberg says.

But there is a generational divide. For kids born in the `80s and later, Atari elicits a respectful nod as a retro video game icon at best – and a clueless shrug at worst.

"It may rise again, but it remains to be seen whether Atari's place is among retail giants (such as) Activision and Electronic Arts," Steinberg says, "Or in a future that is defined by its own past."

Activision, which now makes such hit games as "Call of Duty" and "Diablo III," was founded in 1979 by four disgruntled Atari game designers who wanted more recognition for their work.

As Activision's future rose, Atari's faltered. Having cemented video games as a form of mass entertainment, Atari was sold to Warner Communications Inc. in 1976 and began to pile up big losses.

Warner, now part of Time Warner Inc., discontinued the Atari 2600 and fired Bushnell, says Stephen Jacobs, professor of interactive games and media at the Rochester Institute of Technology in Rochester, N.Y.

Meanwhile, several companies tried to capitalize on Atari's success, but flooded the market with terrible products. It was a gold rush, with little gold to be had.

Atari contributed to that decline in quality with "E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial," still considered one of the worst video games ever made – and that's being generous.

"They tried to push something out in six weeks," Jacobs says. "They pushed out a million units of a horrible game that they were sure was just going to be the bomb. And it ended up tanking Atari."

That was the Christmas of 1982. What followed is now referred to as the "great video game crash of 1983." People stopped buying video games.

Companies began collapsing and Atari was soon sold to a man named Jack Tramiel. Over the next decade, Atari made computers, a game console called Jaguar and a handheld game machine called the Lynx. None were hits.

Atari was then passed to the toy company Hasbro, then to Infogrames Entertainment, a French company that owns it today.

Recognizing the promise of mobile devices and its best-known titles, Atari today makes such phone games as "Centipede: Origins" and "Breakout Boost," a take on the game Steve Jobs worked on back in the day.

"The legacy is that Atari is essentially where it all began," says Jim Wilson, the company's current CEO.

So is Atari living off its legacy?

"To a certain point almost all entertainment companies are doing a bunch of living on their legacy. That's why we have `sequel-itis' in triple-A games, movies, books," Jacobs says. "Why invest in new things when you can beat the old things to death and still make money out of them?"

___

Follow Barbara Ortutay on Twitter at http://twitter.com/BarbaraOrtutay

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HUFFPOST BLOGGER
Scott Baker
President:Common Ground-NYC;NYS Coordinator:PBI
04:57 PM on 07/13/2012
Good news! Those who want to type in my classic BASIC game: "Things in the Dark", can now do so! The code has been added here: http://www.atarimagazines.com/compute/issue55/dark.php
Beware of the Norfs!
12:38 PM on 07/02/2012
Reading a lot of your comments it is clear that many of you span the entire consumer history of computing.

Just think how the technology has changed...

It reminds me of thinking about my grandparents, who grew up in the days of 'horse and buggy', yet lived to fly on jet airliners to the coast to see their kids. And watch on TV, while men walked on the moon.

One lifetime...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Nik Davis
Both a dork and a geek. At the same time, even!
01:50 AM on 07/02/2012
Atari was making computers long before they were bought by Jack Tramiel...for pete's sake, you use a picture of one of their first computers, the Atari 800 (which was first available in 1979) in your article!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
oxjr
01:24 PM on 07/01/2012
I got my Atari for Christmas in 1984. It was a huge purchase for my lower middle-class family. Of course by then the faster, slicker, more reliable systems had started hitting the market and my faux wood Atari looked ancient. I began to hate it, and because I realized my parents could not afford a better system, I pretended to all my friends that I just didn't care about video games.That white lie morphed into the truth, and soon I did not even go near the arcade.

I have really played a video game in 25 years - until I made the mistake of trying Google's Angry Birds app. Darn it.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Wake Up Call
Poking your brain with a pointy stick.
01:17 PM on 07/01/2012
COMPLETE BALONEY! Atari died around 1984 after Warner bought it and ran it into the ground. The right to use the NAME Atari was sold a couple of times since then, but it has ABSOLUTELY NOTHING to do with the original company or ANY of its employees.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
mspat44417
Rock it if ya got it...Music
12:45 PM on 07/01/2012
That was a interesting article...I remember playing pong at the bowling alley as a teen it cost a quarter... and centipede was so cool and Galaga... lol WE bought Nintendo in 85 for Christmas and the games Mario, hooligans alley and got the gun that came to play hooligans alley you shot the bad guys one the screen in different categories we thought it was the coolest thing....The games cost 50$ a piece just like now...Why do those games still cost 50 or more $$$$....Oh yeah it's the greed to make lots of money off people...
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HUFFPOST BLOGGER
Scott Baker
President:Common Ground-NYC;NYS Coordinator:PBI
04:29 AM on 07/01/2012
I learned programming on the Atari 400-800 PCs. These were considered real computers back then, with BASIC as a foundational programming language for any budding programmer. I never did master Assembler, but my published video game is summarized here: http://www.atarimagazines.com/compute/issue55/dark.php
Unfortunately, the code isn't listed like it was in the magazine, so all you aspiring gamers who want to spend hours typing BASIC instructions (don't forget those commas!), will have to dig up the original issue of Compute! magazine from 1984!
Learning programming on the Atari led to my 22-year career as a Manager of Information Systems. I'm sure Atari has launched thousands of other careers.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
12:33 PM on 07/01/2012
It wasn't too hard to fill up the memory on an Atari400 just typing code as a 12 year old. Running out of space was a real bummer.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
10:56 PM on 07/02/2012
"Removed"? Wha?
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mspat44417
Rock it if ya got it...Music
12:51 PM on 07/01/2012
I remember a guy telling me he was taking computer classes I ask what's that ahd he was talking about DOS and such...When I worked at Mcds in the 80s we use to send our end of the day paper work over the phone line....I remember I had to tell everyone to be quite and not make noise so I could stick the receiver of the phone in the "computer" to send data..you could hear all the noise it made connecting... and if any one made noise it would disconnect and I would have to do it again....was funny compared to now...
12:47 AM on 07/01/2012
Damn! I am old.... old... old, I say!

:-(
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JasonMcl
Hey a countdown clock. MannNnn that is trouble...
12:39 AM on 07/01/2012
Making bad baldur's gate spinoffs that nobody wants to play. (that was 10 years ago of course but I'm a bitter old gamer holding a grudge).
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Michael Kittredge
sigh
10:52 PM on 06/30/2012
I remember playing Atari in the 80s, there were some really fun games for it, despite it being so primitive by todays standards. The origin of Mario, and a number of other characters and game franchises.

Then, like now, there was a lot of garbage being foisted on the public at full price, and many a regrettable purchase was made. Thank goodness for reviews and demos and betas. Now people can find out what they are in for before they plunk down $60
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02:39 AM on 07/01/2012
Nope, Atari had absolutely nothing to do with the origin of Mario.
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Michael Kittredge
sigh
02:53 AM on 07/01/2012
No link, no explanation, just being contrary. You're insinuating there was a more primitive gaming device before the atari system that had a mario game on it?
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
10:31 PM on 06/30/2012
Atari still owes me a 2600 cartridge I won from them.

They were accepting suggestions for their monthly Atari Club user's magazine. They ran with my submitted idea for "guess-the-closeups-of-screen-shots" and said they'd send me my choice of game.

Where's my Gravitron cartridge Nolan Bushnell?! I've been waiting three decades!
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susanfabian
07:19 PM on 06/30/2012
Wow.. Pong. I had friends that had Pong and Breakaway.. I played them, wasn't good, but I played them.

It was being so crummy at those games that made my not play video games now.. Well, except Wii. My family loves to play those games.

Can't get my Mii short or fat enough for my tastes. I want it to look like me : )
04:30 PM on 06/30/2012
I didn't think they were still in business. They might want to spend some more on PR.
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TheWorldshopeless
02:01 PM on 07/01/2012
I was thinking the same thing, or maybe they should actually make some new games
11:06 AM on 06/30/2012
Intellivision really upped the ante in home video game consoles but seems to have been largely forgotten. Too bad.
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04:12 PM on 06/30/2012
The Intellivision controller was really lame, though.
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corkery
I could've been somebody not like the bum I am now
10:00 AM on 06/30/2012
I stupidly got a Colecovision and always kicked myself for not getting an Atari. At that time I couldn't afford to get an Atari too. Atari always had some of the best games back then until Nintendo came around.
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John MC
04:36 PM on 07/02/2012
I can't remember if it was a add on or you pluged the games in a different port but I do remember you could play Atari games on a Colecovision. Also, the games on Colecovision actually looked like the Arcade games you paid a quarter for, by then the Atari games were starting to look really pathetic – Pac Man, Space Invaders – Ouch!