How about the weird: Load "whatever",8,1 you had to do for the Commodore? Old Atari was able to boot from disc when turned down if you held the option button
The first computer I touched was an Apple II, so I didn't understand the ,8 business at first until my later systems with multiple drives. Now that I have three disk drives, some of which are less compatible than the others (the 1581 3.5" drive, for example), I need the ,8 to specify which one. 8 is the first device, 9 is the second, 10 is the third ...
The Apples do this too, although it's usually just D0 and D1. However, you can only boot from D0.
The ,1 says that this is a binary (not BASIC) and should be loaded to its exact position in memory instead of trying to relink it for BASIC text, sort of like BLOAD and BRUN on the Apple II. I don't know what the Atari DOS equivalent would be.
Interestingly, the 128 will autoboot from device 8 -- if you have a disk with an encoded boot sector, it will boot and run it. There's a hack where you paste up data in the cartridge memory range (which is now RAM with the cartridge out) and switch to 64 mode using the 128 Kernal jump table. In 64 mode, the memory isn't cleared and the "64" thinks there's a cartridge in, automatically running your code. This means with a 128, you really can boot 64 software if it's written to support it.
The Atari 130XE had some of the same problems as the 128. No one really wrote much software to take advantage of its extra memory. However, there were some productivity applications for the 128's 80 column 2MHz mode, and Kermit/64 could use the 80 column chip (still accessible from 64 mode) if it was set up that way.
I called only free BBSes. We had an account on QuantumLink (the Commodore-only ancestor of AOL), but didn't use it much since all we had was a 300bps modem in those days and the connect charge burned. There were a lot of free BBSes locally, and we won 50,000 download credits (my friend and I) for being the last login on December 31st some year, and the first on January 1st, respectively. I think we drained their entire file subs after that.
I didn't touch a Mac until 1987. At that point, it was the most powerful computer I'd ever encountered, with an 8MHz 68000, 1MB of RAM and 30MB of hard drive space. The SCSI disk got whomped when one of the kids bumped it while the heads weren't parked, though.
I miss the 80s.
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