The Atari Video Computer System from Ingersoll This advert for the Granddaddy of the modern video game comes in the form of a gate-fold brochure containing a colourful list of 40 or so game cartridges, as well as the cartoon character "Captain Atari". Subscribers to the Owners' Club could apparently expect to receive "bulletins packed with news". In this case, the advert is actually from Ingersoll Electronics Ltd, at one time part of Gerald Ronson's Heron Group[source: https://www.thewatchforum.co.uk/threads/ingersoll-revival-and-reinvention.89566/post-893956] and one of the two early importers of the 2600 - the other being Cherry Leisure - both of whom were selling the Atari in the UK before Atari itself[source: https://forums.atariage.com/topic/74297-ingersoll/]. Early models of the 2600 sold in the UK even came with Ingersoll-branded power supplies. Although in appearance just a games console, the Atari 2600 "Woody" contained a cut-down version of MOS (eventually Commodore's) 6502 processor - the 6507, which had a reduced seven-bit memory bus, making it cheaper to build around. The bigger 6502 was a fully-fledged CPU used on many microcomputers of the day, from the Commodore PET through the Microtan, to the BBC Micro, Apple I and II, Atari's own later micros and, in enhanced form, the Commodore 64 and the 128. The 6502 and its arch rival, Zilog's Z80, between them owned much of the microcomputer CPU market from the mid-1970s onwards, although the 6502 was possibly the more numerous of the two, at least from the KIM-1 of 1976 to the increasing domination of the IBM PC from the mid 1980s[source: http://forum.6502.org/viewtopic.php?f=1&t=6185]. This was partly due to its low price, which was significantly less than competitiors, at least when it launched, but also because MOS provided a range of easy-to-use support chips to go with it, like the 6522 VIA[source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MOS_Technology_6522]. It was also the CPU which influenced the development of Acorn's ARM processor[source: "A natural upgrade", Newsprint, PCW, December 1986, p. 111], as the 6502 was said to be almost like a reduced instruction set processor - although its original 1MHz clock speed was nominally a quarter that of the 4MHz Z80, computers running it were often faster[source: https://techtinkering.com/articles/benchmarking-basic-on-vintage-computers/], although a lot of a micro's effective performance often came down to the BASIC running on it. Like most companies on either side of the 6502/Z80 "religious divide", Atari stuck with the architecture it started out on, and went on to use the 6502 for its later machines, including the Atari 400, 800, and the XL series, until its takeover by former Commodore head Jack Tramiel and the switch to the Motorola 68000 for the Atari ST. The 2600 also contained a custom video chip - the Television Interface Adapter (or TIA) designed by Jay Miner, who ended up in a company called Hi-Toro, which became Amiga and which was bought by Commodore. The early computer industry was nothing if not incestuous. By August 1983 - further proof that it was still selling - the 2600's advertised cost in the UK had come down to £69.99 ([[70|1983]] in [[now]]) - a reduction of £20 off the previous price. This was a bundle offer which included a Pac-Man cartridge - mentioned in this June 1982 advert as a "soon to be released title" - which by itself cost £29.99 ([[30|1983]] in [[now]])[source: "Free bites", p.4 Personal Computer News, Vol 1. No. 24, August 24 1983]. Also by virtue of the fact that its seven-pin joystick socket had become something of a standard on computers like the VIC-20, C64 and Atari's own 400 and 800, it was still possible to get new joysticks compatibile with it even by the end of 1983, such as the Triga Command distributed by Datel Electronics, available for the VCS at £14.49[source: "Finger on the Triga", PCN, September 22 1983, p. 8] - about [[15|1983]] in [[now]]. Active development of the 2600 continued through unti at least 1984, when Atari was working on its Graduate keyboard which would have upgraded the 2600 in to a full computer. However, the project was canned, with Atari's marketing director Eric Salamon saying that the Graduate keyboard "hasn't been introduced because we couldn't get the quality for the price we would have to charge to make the keyboard worth buying". Atari couldn't get a big-enough software base and didn't want to be lumbered with an un-supported small-memory machine[source: "Atari treads carefully", PCN, No.44 January 14th 1984, p. 5]. The 2600 itself wasn't officially discontinued until 1992[source: Huey Morgan, BBC Radio 6 Music, broadcast 5th September 2015] - an almost unbelieveable stretch of 15 years for a machine with a 1975 processor.