Atari STacy
The STacy is a portable computer version of the Atari ST.
Atari Stacy 2 portable computer with professional MIDI extension | |
Manufacturer | Atari Corporation |
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Release date | September 1989 |
Introductory price | US$2,299 (equivalent to $5,430 in 2022) |
Discontinued | 1991 |
Units shipped | estimated 35,000+ |
Operating system | Atari TOS 1.04 |
CPU | Motorola 68HC000 @ 8 MHz |
Memory | RAM: 1 MiB (expandable to 4 MiB) ROM: 192 KiB |
Storage | 3.5" floppy drive, 3.5" SCSI 20MB-40MB harddrive Conner Peripherals Inc. |
Display | 10.4" EPSON LCD passive matrix backlight |
Graphics | 320x200 (16), 640x200 (4), 640x400 (2) |
Sound | Yamaha YM-2149, three channels, 8 octaves |
Input | 95 keys, QWERTY, 2 Joysticks, RS 232C, Centronics, external Floppy, ROM-Cartridge, DMA for Printer/HD, MIDI In/Out, Monitor |
Power | NiCad pack, 12 standard C cell alkaline batteries, DC18V 2.0A 36W AC Adaptor |
Dimensions | 13.3 x 15 x 13.3 inches |
Mass | 15.2 lb (6,9 Kg) |
Successor | ST BOOK |
The computer was originally designed to operate on 12 standard C cell flashlight batteries for portability. When Atari realized how quickly the machine would use up a set of batteries (especially when rechargeable batteries of the time supplied insufficient power compared to the intended alkalines), they simply glued the lid of the battery compartment shut.
The STacy has features similar to the Macintosh Portable, a version of Apple's Macintosh computer which contained a built in keyboard and monitor.
With built-in MIDI, the STacy enjoyed success for running music-sequencer software and as a controller of musical instruments among both amateurs and well-known musicians.
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