Editorial

 

Issue 21

May/Jun 86

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USER SUPPORT?

I think everybody would agree that Atari is now a totally different company from old but curiously there are some things which Atari seems to want to carry over. The 'old' Atari were renowned for their lack of support and concern for their customers and one would think that the present company would want to change that. Not so, it seems. Atari have recently announced its policy regarding the long awaited ROM upgrade to the ST. Anyone who bought a machine after 1st January will receive their upgrade free of charge but those who bought before 1st January will be charged £25. Now think about that for a while. The vast majority of people who bought machines before 1st January were people like you and me, who trusted the Atari name, who wanted to support Atari and most probably have been loyal to Atari for some time. If it wasn't for these people who bought the early ST's, Atari may well not have made it into 1986. So who deserves the rewards, those who trusted and supported or those who doubted and waited? Atari seem to think that those early purchasers are not so important. To add insult to injury, a batch of machines produced last autumn have a Glue chip which is not compatible with the ROMs so what do Atari do? Give you one free? No, they charge you £18 on top of the cost of the ROMs! That's appalling.

'Thanks for the support suckers!'. Is that really what Jack is trying to say?

THE SURVEY

Thought you might like to know a few details about the readership survey now that the long task of analysing it is complete. Firstly, equipment. Not surprisingly, the majority of you own an 800XL - over 57%, but a surprising number own more than one machine, 34% in fact! The old 800 has a healthy following o f22% whilst the 130XE, despite its lack of publicity, is coming up with 20%.16% have 400's and 9% 600XL's but only 3% of readers have less than 48k memory. ST's? Very few at the time of the survey, but 26% say that they intend to buy one this year. Who says that the UK is a cassette based market? An amazing 75% have disk drives and 13% do not even own a cassette. Are you listening, software houses? Telecommunications are still not popular here with only 6% owning modems but a surprise is that 43% own printers!

Everyone knows the old adage that the Atari is just a games machine, right? Well, PAGE 6 readers are out to prove that wrong as the majority, 38%, use their machines for programming. Arcade games come second with 26% followed by Home Use with 15% and the rest fairly evenly divided. Overall though with main, secondary and other interests taken into account, there is a remarkably even spread of interest, but programming still comes a clear first. You are a dedicated lot too. 66% rate their Atari as their main leisure interest, with 32% indicating it as the secondary interest. In these days of wide ranging and easily available leisure interests, that is a testament to the attraction of Atari computing.

So how clever are you? 9% claim to be advanced programmers with the remainder split between 48% intermediate and 43% beginners. That's a lot of advanced programmers, how about some contributions? Finally, the actual readership. PAGE 6 sure gets passed around with as many as 12 people reading one copy in some cases! Overall the survey indicates a readership of just over 10,000 which, combined with the level of dedication, is highly respectable.

Conclusions? Well if everybody who actually reads PAGE 6 would subscribe and if each of those 'advanced' programmers would send in a program or article we would have no problem in bringing you a top quality monthly magazine! But then, these things don't normally happen. Or do they?

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