T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
977.1 | Atari is up to no good | BAGELS::FELDMAN | Jerry Feldman DTN 227-3279 | Fri Oct 05 1990 14:38 | 37 |
| From my perpsective as the head of a large Atari User group in Boston
which generally get defecated upon by the Katzenjammer (eg. the
Tramiels). Not only does Atari consistently miss deadlines, sometimes
for very good legitimate reasons, mostly because of incompetence, but
they rarely advertise (although the Portfolio has been decently
promoted). The Northeast US which is a very large technical market was
without an Atari Rep for over a year. Jack Tramiel, the founder of
Commodore, and the Chairman of Atari, made many promises in front of
the press, and then went back to California and broke most of them.
As far as the Northeast AtariFest is concerned, the only promise that
Atari made to us is that Bob Brodie would be coming to Boston on
October 27. The show was never an official Atari show, and Atari hos no
real obligation to support us. However, the BCS is one of the world's
largest computer user groups with nearly 30,000 members. We should
expect that Atari could do more than just send Brodie empty handed.
Although I like my ST, I quit using it for any real development several
years ago, after my involvement in Chessmaster 2000. Probably, my next
computer will NOT be an Atari because of the incompetent management of
the tramiel family (eg. Sam Tramiel is the US president, and Leonard is
kind of the Vice President of somethings technical, kind of like Pooh
Bah).
The Stacy is an excellent laptop, but because of Atari, I am loathe to
buy one. I will probably get a decent clone laptop. Again, I reiterate
that I do like Atari products, but they have terrible followup, and in
the US, they have allowed much of their third party developers to
erode. In the Boston metro Area we only have 2 legitimate dealers, and
one is a one man shop. The other, The Bit Bucket, is a full line dealer
who also carries Amigas, and several clones, has only very recently
started to push Atari. About a year ago, if one were to go there and
ask for an Atari, they would try to steer you toward an Amiga. When we
had the last NE AtariFest in Worcester, we had no less than 5 dealers
in the metro area. And, every time I talk with a dealer, I get a lot of
complaints. I wish it were different. Many people in the Atari
community are very loyal and enthusiastic, but I don't know how long
that will last.
|
977.2 | | BAGELS::BRANNON | Dave Brannon | Fri Oct 05 1990 20:23 | 7 |
| Any news on that new guy, the one from Atari France that is supposed
to do wonders for the US market? Last thing I saw was something about
trying to pick a new headquarters somewhere within reasonable flight
times to Europe. I thought that was Jack T. trying to save the
company from the effects of Sam & Co. Or are they still in charge?
Dave
|
977.3 | Not to happen | BAGELS::FELDMAN | Jerry Feldman DTN 227-3279 | Mon Oct 08 1990 14:59 | 7 |
| As I understand it, that was just a rumor that got canned. It is my
opinion that Atari really does not care much for the US market. Maybe
some things will change when the TT starts to ship. Who knows. Every
year, Sam Tramiel says that there will be changes. Every year the only
thing that changes is one group of people is replaced by another
equally incompetent group.
|
977.4 | | ACE::SANDERS | Resist much, Obey little | Wed Oct 10 1990 20:40 | 2 |
|
The rest of a company is only as good as its leader.
|
977.5 | A milestone at Atari? | BAGELS::FELDMAN | Jerry Feldman DTN 227-3279 | Mon Oct 15 1990 14:52 | 14 |
| Atari's VP of Sales is Bob Crouch who is one of the few marketing
people who tells it like it is. He has been at Atari for just over 1
year now. The normal tenure for that position has been 18 months or
less. If He is still at Atari in January, it will be a very positive
milestone for Atari. I think Atari's new products, the Stacy,
Portfolio, STe, and the TT are good products hampered by the
Katzenjammer (eg. Tramiel brothers). As my counterparts with the
Commodore users group will attest, trying to make sense out of
Tramiel's strategy is a waste of time. At present, I am taking a wait
and see attitude. Each year at COMDEX, Atari has a decent booth, and
Sam says that this is the year of Atari. Now sinceApple has finally
made the Mac more affordable, let's see what Atari can do. I certainly
would like to see more presence in the US market.
|
977.6 | Mixed Message | ULTRA::KINDEL | Bill Kindel @ BXB1 | Wed Oct 17 1990 17:35 | 14 |
| Re .1:
> In the Boston metro Area we only have 2 legitimate dealers, and one is
> a one man shop. The other, The Bit Bucket, is a full line dealer who
> also carries Amigas, and several clones, has only very recently started
> to push Atari. About a year ago, if one were to go there and ask for an
> Atari, they would try to steer you toward an Amiga.
At various other times in recent history, I've seen the Bit Bucket
steer customers from the Amiga to the ST. (I'm an Amiga owner, so the
symmetry of the situation isn't lost on me.) I think this just says
that the Bit Bucket is less loyal to our respective machines than WE
are. Of course, there may also be a rivalry going on among their
employees that could mix up the Bit Bucket's message in this way.
|
977.7 | Jack Tramiel just bought Commodore | BAGELS::FELDMAN | Jerry Feldman DTN 227-3279 | Thu Oct 18 1990 14:53 | 18 |
| During the period of time when the Bit Bucket was pushing people away
from the ST was when management, eg. Bill Blotcher, was very angry at
Atari. Currently, there are employees that are more loyal to one brand
over the other. What I was refering to was that through no fault of the
BB, they were done several disservices by Atari. At that time, the
Atari rep was Andy Bell who is an Amiga bigot, and who never liked
Atari, and I am wondering why Andy ever decided to work for Atari. The
following year, there was absoutely no local Atari rep. Also, during
that period, there were a lot of failures of the mono monitors. The
former Amiga reps, Tech Plus, who now represents Atari has worked hard
to steer the BB away from Atari and now is trying to help the BB
emphasize Atari. Basically, the BB is one of the better computer
dealers in the area. Generally, there are people on staff who are
technically knowledgable about the products they sell, in contrast to
places like NEECO or Computerland.
When the BB was steering people away from Atari, they had some very
legitimate gripes.
|
977.8 | Jack bought what? | BAGELS::BRANNON | Dave Brannon | Mon Oct 22 1990 17:33 | 13 |
| re: .7 title "Jack Tramiel just bought Commodore"
Sounds like a great rumor. I can see it now... he bought Atari as an
investment to help build up his fame and fortune until he had enough
to buy Commodore out from under Irving Gould :-)
re: why Andy ever decided to work for Atari
I believe it was a case of timing. Atari was looking for a rep, and
Commodore had decided to directly service their dealers, so his Amiga
job vanished. I may be wrong, but that is my understanding of what
happened.
Dave
|
977.9 | Andy was actually knifed | BAGELS::FELDMAN | Jerry Feldman DTN 227-3279 | Tue Oct 23 1990 10:38 | 13 |
| I believe at the time that tech Plus was still the Amiga rep. In any
case it was an oportunity for Andy. Actually, Andy was somewhat
inexperienced, and was also ardently disliked by Alan Glick who was the
director of the BCS Atari ST group. Alan formerly worked for Apex who
was the Atari Manufacturers rep when the ST came out. Alan's objective
was to become the local rep. Andy was in a very difficult position.
Even though he had some strong enemies, he did not serve the existing
dealers very well. I am not sure whether Andy attended ABACUS meetings,
but his one appearance at the BCS, Alan Glick made it clear that he was
not wanted. In all fairness to Andy, he basically had a deck stacked
against him. At the same time, Atari basically was starting to withdraw
support from the Northeast.
|