ANTIC AT THE FIRST GEM SEMINAR
Converting IBM PC software to Atari
by NAT FRIEDLAND, Antic EditorAntic was the ONLY Atari Magazine present
at the first GEM Software Developers Seminar held at Monterey, California
in February by Digital Research, Inc. DRI created the "Macintosh-like"
GEM operating interface that is being used for the new 16-bit Atari ST
computers.
GEM has aroused especially wide interest in the computer
industry because it's supposed to make it simple to convert software between
the IBM PC and clones, the Macintosh, the Atari ST and any other computer
that GEM licenses a version for.
Some of Atari's top technical executives were on hand,
debuting a working ST with a preliminary version of Atari GEM burned into
ROM.
Antic was told that Atari still considers itself
on schedule for bringing the first production ST computers onto the market
in April. Full ST production capacity won't be reached until June. The
10-15 megabyte hard disk for the ST will show up in the summer.
ATARI CAD/CAM?
Remember the 32-bit Atari we reported Jack Tramiel talking about at
his November press conference? Well, apparently it is well along in development.
Atari still hopes to meet Tramiel's goal of unveiling the machine at the
April electronics fair in Hanover, Germany.
Every time Atari engineers talked about the 32-bit computer
in Monterey, delighted smiles appeared on their faces. The computer was
described to Antic as a "VAX minicomputer on a chip" and a "$40,000
CAD/ CAM computer graphics workstation that will sell for under $2,000."
LEARNING ABOUT GEM
As for the GEM Seminar itself, the $800 workshop was highly technical
and directed at professional consumer-software programmers who were thoroughly
experienced with the C language or with Macintosh window program development.
The Seminar sessions were taken up with highly detailed
discussions of GEM development nuts and bolts such as the strict interfacing
procedures which are supposed to make "porting" GEM-based programs between
different computers a routine one-day process.
Access to GEM windows, debugging, and correct embedding
of transfer hooks were among the other technical topics discussed. All
attendees were given the two-volume GEM Toolkit documentation. Dill's recommended
professional development language was Lattice C, which costs around $500.
It should be noted that the Seminar was specifically dealing
with the just-completed IBM PC version of GEM. Six-disk beta test editions
of GEM were being sold to developers by DRI for $500. The GEM Library software
of prepared graphics routines cost extra.
The Atari version of GEM was not yet ready for beta testing
at the time of the Seminar.
WETMORE SUMS UP
Russ Wetmore, author of Homepak and Preppie as well as
other major Atari programs, flew in from his Florida homebase to attend
the seminar and then stayed on to see the Mac-World Show in San Francisco.
He spent time at Antic during this period and shared
with us the viewpoints of a highly experienced Atari professional programmer.
"I think the developers at the Seminar fell into two groups.
One group is totally sold on the GEM goal of making a lot of different
computers compatible with each other," said Wetmore. 'And for now they
are willing to overlook any unanswered questions that came up during the
sessions. The second group is taking more of a wait-and-see attitude."
Wetmore expresses some doubt that GEM software will port
between different computers as easily as Dill says it will. He also feels
that GEM lacks certain built-in features found in the Macintosh interface-such
as a text editor-which will make it more difficult for professional programmers
to work with.
Despite this, Wetmore was positive enough about GEM that
he bought the Seminar disks and intends to invest over $4,500 for a souped-up
IBM PC to run Lattice C. "But right now any GEM programs I publish will
just be for the Atari," he said, "because it's the only computer that a
developer won't be charged royalties for by DRI when the software comes
out."