Jump to content
SRGilbert

Why no keyboard for the 5200?

Recommended Posts

We all know that the 5200 is an basically an Atari computer in disguise. I'm a little surprised that Atari never went the upgrade route and designed it to accept a keyboard and disc drives and all that. Was it ever even considered?

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

One reason I can think of is that there was a lot of internal competition between the console and computer divisions within Atari. A 5200 keyboard and disk drive interface might have been technologically feasible, but they would have encroached upon the 400/800 computers' "territory", since they would have provided computer-like functionality on a machine that was based on the same technology as the 400/800 computers.

 

The 7800 keyboard wasn't considered to be as much of a "threat" to the computer side because the 7800 – and the software that was being developed for the 7800 keyboard, such as OSS BASIC – was sufficiently different from the home computers. The internal Atari culture also seems to have changed somewhat by the time the 7800 came on the scene.

  • Like 1

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

If one wanted an Atari computer that had a keyboard and played games, they would have bought the 400, 600XL, 800, or 800XL. There would be no reason to give the 5200 a keyboard if that system was just going to be sold primarily as a game system. The games for both the 5200 and the 8-bit computers were identical or similar enough, though some games for the 5200 took advantage of keypad functions on the controller that would make a similar version on the 8-bit computers pretty hard to control unless a person was sitting right at the computer, and even then the control would be like modern game system emulation on a personal computer.

Edited by Vic George 2K3
  • Like 1

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

Another thing was that the 7800 was developed by GCC who didn't have to deal with all the internal crap between divisions at Atari. Plus it was developed a little later in time. Things at Atari changed rather quickly throughout the company's history.

 

Allan

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

Had such a thing been done, the software support would seem to have to fall to the PCS (Personal Computer System) group, but the console was under the videogaming group, so there might've been turf wars.

 

Several Atari employees of that era I've spoken to think that Atari made a huge mistake going into the PCS business, and should have taken the chipset for what ended up in the computers and 5200 and gotten out a more powerful replacement system for the VCS closer to 1980.

  • Like 1

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

Several Atari employees of that era I've spoken to think that Atari made a huge mistake going into the PCS business, and should have taken the chipset for what ended up in the computers and 5200 and gotten out a more powerful replacement system for the VCS closer to 1980.

Supposedly that was the original plan.

 

Allan

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

During the runup to the crash, Coleco was heavily promoting their upcoming "computer expansion module #3". While the ADAM was never successful, it gave Coleco a big edge in the propaganda war. So Atari missed a huge opportunity not making the 5200 an extension of their already successful computer line. (Had they done this successfully, the 7800 probably would have never happened, and Tramiel would have probably focused entirely on the computers. )

 

And its one thing to say 5200 and 8bit were basically the same now, it would have been quite another back then, when everyone had to buy the same software over again.

  • Like 1

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

In hindsight, if Atari was going to go the route of having the 5200 be the consolized 8-bit computer line, it should have been compatible with the 8-bit computer line from the start, cartridges and controllers.

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

Why, because there was no software that required it, of course.</badjoke>

Edited by Rex Dart

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

Very interesting thread. In the years since this last post, lots of things have happened in the hobbyist market that could be adapted to the Atari 5200 for example one guy interfaced a wireless USB keyboard into a TI computer, I imagine something like that could be done now with mostly off the shelf components.

 

Using an Arduino or Raspberry Pie I bet it would be possible to simulate an Atari 400 or 800 and give the 5200 some new capabilities. I t sure looks like there is lots of room inside that case to hide some modern day enhancements.

 

Who knows a couple of years from now you might be able to play a head to head version of a game over your WiFi capable 5200! After all with an AtariMax cartridge new games are just a download away.

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

From a programming standpoint, the keyboard circuits are there, but they're repurposed to scan the keypad, start-pause-reset keys, and the top trigger button.

 

I'm not an expert, but I would expect that those changes might make it difficult or impossible to use a real keyboard on the 5200 without some serious hardware tricks. If nothing else, they would probably make using a keyboard and a controller at the same time impossible.

 

Again though, I'm not a hardware expert, so maybe I totally wrong about this.

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

I'm not exactly sure yet how the Atari 400 / 800 / 5200 keyscan routines works. The only dual keyboard experience I have is with the TI-99/4A and there were two different homebrew types of keyboard interfaces made for that system, both allow the original keyboard and supplemental keyboards to be hooked up at the same time.

 

One of the things I really get a charge out of is seeing what hardware hackers have able to do with various 'classic systems'. Since the 5200 appears to essentially be a stripped down Atari 400, I figured the 5200 platform is a diamond in the rough and has lots of potential room for future growth.

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

The 5200 basically treats each controller as a separate keyboard, and you can only scan one at a time. For multiplayer games, you have to continually rotate through the controllers. Maybe there's a better way I don't know about. The top trigger button is actually read as if it were the Shift key on a keyboard.

 

I'm convinced this is why so few 5200 games actually make use of the second trigger. Reading it is kind of a pain, honestly.

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

i got 2 ideas

 

#1 to reduce complexity you dont want it to look excessivly complicated to a technophobe

 

#2 games are licenced and sold differently between game consoles and home computers

  • Like 1

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

i got 2 ideas

 

#1 to reduce complexity you dont want it to look excessivly complicated to a technophobe

 

#2 games are licenced and sold differently between game consoles and home computers

 

 

Ain't that really the truth about #2. And not just between consoles and home computers but also on the physical media too! That's how the SuperCharger got to market their own version of Frogger, on tape!

 

I also suspect that's how the Vectrex got Pole Position even though Atari seemingly had exclusive home rights to that game. There must've been either no clause preventing a home version on a vector monitor based system or Atari passed on it for some other concession from Namco.

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

It's a game console. doesn't need one.

 

true, but it was a short-lived fad in the 80s around the time of the crash that every console needed a keyboard option to turn it into a computer. This thinking was taken to the extreme with the Adam. (and mostly died with it)

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

During the runup to the crash, Coleco was heavily promoting their upcoming "computer expansion module #3". While the ADAM was never successful, it gave Coleco a big edge in the propaganda war. So Atari missed a huge opportunity not making the 5200 an extension of their already successful computer line. (Had they done this successfully, the 7800 probably would have never happened, and Tramiel would have probably focused entirely on the computers. )

 

And its one thing to say 5200 and 8bit were basically the same now, it would have been quite another back then, when everyone had to buy the same software over again.

 

True, back then we suspected that the 5200 was a repackaged 400 or something, but couldn't really prove It.. at least until the hackers started "porting" 5200 games to 8-bit (well that's what confirmed it for me anyway). Atari reworked some of their games to look better on the 5200, adding to the confusion.

 

In hindsight, if Atari was going to go the route of having the 5200 be the consolized 8-bit computer line, it should have been compatible with the 8-bit computer line from the start, cartridges and controllers.

 

One issue was licensing that made this complex. Back then companies might license cartridge rights and disk/tape rights separately. This is why there were multiple versions of Frogger from different companies on the VCS and 8-bit. Also Nintendo licensed games separately for console and computer. Notably Donkey Kong. Coleco had the console rights, Atari had the computer rights. Atari sued Coleco when DK was running on the Adam. Had the 5200 been cartridge compatible with the 8-bit, Atari would be open to the same types of lawsuits.

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

They should have just made a sleek black version of the 400, perhaps without the lid but with the existing membrane keyboard and no SIO2 Port and pushed it for the 5200's price point instead of the 5200. It already had a good library. Then the XEGS and 5200 would never have been needed.

 

SIO2 capability could also have been retained or with a different format connector to not step on the 8-bit line's toes...

 

I love my 400. It's really just a great game console with an occasional use keyboard. It gets more play than any of my other Atari consoles.

Edited by Zonie

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

Loading...

  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    No registered users viewing this page.

×
×
  • Create New...