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Bill Lange

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Posts posted by Bill Lange


  1. "Thanks to Bill and Lucy Lange for putting me up in his place, as well as making it possible for Joe Decuir to show up, in the first place!"

     

     

    Lucy and I enjoyed having Nir, Thomas, Allan, Kevin, and Randy stay over one or more nights. Even Maciej and Michael Sternberg came over for a few hours. Someone joked that if a meteor hit our house, it would have taken out half the world's Atari 8-bit enthusiasts!
    As for making Joe's Keynote possible, it was a team effort really. Peter Fletcher and I funded it, but Curt had the contacts, and Evan approved it and made the arraignments. I'm glad that it all worked out.
    It was such an amazing weekend. For me, it was the best VCF East yet. We are not likely to see that kind of Atari exhibit again.
    • Like 9

  2. On the morning of Saturday, April 20th, 2019, my wife Lucy and I made the short drive from our house in Somerset, NJ up the hill to Morristown, where we met up with none other than Dr. David H. Ahl, publisher of Creative Computing, Atari Explorer, and Atarian magazines, as well as many other well known magazines and books. We spent an hour or so at his house listening to his stories of Nolan Bushnell, Paul Allen, etc.


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    Oh, and also while there, we acquired Dave’s remaining retro-gaming collection: hardware, software, books, magazines, etc. The collection included mostly common Atari hardware (2600s, 5200, 7800, Home PONG) and software (dozens and dozens of cartridges), but it is/was the hardware and software used to write reviews and articles in his various magazines, so it has some street cred and cool history.


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    Some hardware highlights include a PONG arcade machine control panel, a Lady Bug arcade cabinet (which I need to go back and pick up), and a Commodore PET computer.


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    The most interesting part of the collection is a file box full of Dave’s personal papers (from the early 1970s to the late 1980s and beyond) including Atari (Commodore, Sega, etc.) New Releases, Product Announcements, Legal Files, photographs, slides … just thousands and thousands of pages of printed matter treasure.


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    As always, I’ve been scanning as I go along, uploading the files to archive.org, posting to The Ahl Collection blog, and my Twitter feed. I’d like to keep this collection together, virtually at least. Maybe scan it, organize it, bag it and tag it, then donate most of the printed matter to a museum.


    Also included in the collection are some magazines and books. Not as many as I would have liked … I had dreams of multiple copies of BASIC Computer Games and More BASIC Computer Games for multiple platforms and in multiple (spoken) languages. But to be honest, the bankers box of files alone was worth the price of admission, a donation to a charity of Dave’s choice.


    How did this acquisition come to pass?


    I was chatting with my friend Rob Wanenchak (@AtariSpot on Twitter) about the upcoming Atari Party East. Rob is the guy that took the amazing photos at APE 2017 and APE 2018. I knew that Rob had dealt with Dave before, so I mentioned to Rob that he should invite Dave to APE 2019 in September.


    Rob invited Dave via email and copied me. Dave responded that he was open to coming but September was a ways off and he would have to see. He also responded that he was looking to move his remaining retro computer / retro gaming collection. I responded that I would take it all, sight unseen. We worked out a deal that was acceptable to him and I (and most importantly, my wife). As I mentioned, we made a donation to a charity of Dave’s choice and my company matched it. The money is earmarked to help build a school in Peru, which just happens to be where my wife is from. Win, win, win. Tax write off.


    I've got some scanning to do!
    • Like 33

  3. It would be cool if they could be made with bookend "feet" to go under the books.

     

     

    My smallish Flashforge Finder printer can only print slightly less than 6 inches square. The cart holder is slightly more than 4 inches deep. I can whip up another version that has an inch and a half or so of "footness" that a book or two can sit on. Its not much, but its something.


  4. if they could be made with bookend "feet"

     

     

    That is a nice idea.

     

    hollow and open on the bottom

     

     

    They are not open on the bottom, but they are not exactly solid (as I printed them) either. The 3d printer kind of honeycombs the "solid" internal parts ... just enough material for the needed structure. You can increase the "solid-ness", but it already takes about 7 hours to print and uses 15% to 20% of a spool of filament.

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