Path: utzoo!utgpu!water!watmath!clyde!att!osu-cis!tut.cis.ohio-state.edu!bloom-beacon!bu-cs!purdue!decwrl!sun!pitstop!sundc!seismo!uunet!mcvax!nikhefh!t68 From: t68@nikhefh.hep.nl (Jos Vermaseren) Newsgroups: comp.sys.atari.st Subject: Re: Wait a Sec... (was Re: Atari fair at Duesseldorf (West Germany)) Message-ID: <539@nikhefh.hep.nl> Date: 21 Sep 88 09:22:34 GMT References: <5618@pasteur.Berkeley.EDU> <5440005@hplsla.HP.COM> <472NETOPRHM@NCSUVM> Reply-To: t68@nikhefh.hep.nl (Jos Vermaseren) Organization: Nikhef-H, Amsterdam (the Netherlands). Lines: 20 All this talk about a dying computer is clearly by people who are either 1: unfamiliar with the European scene 2: unfriendly to the ST (have an axe to grind). In Europe the ST is selling very well. Maybe a part of the American problem (if it exists) is that a much larger percentage of systems sold in the US is a color system than in Europe. The color systems are not really very suitable to work with (in the eyes of all the people that I know who have an Atari). This leaves the color systems as either a special purpose system, or a games machine. If the dying approach concerns those applications I'll not say very much. The monochrome systems that I see in use every day are very powerful mini computers. In the shops they sell very well. Maybe the good software never made it to the US. A sign that indicates this is that even turbo-c for the ST was developed in Germany, not by Borland-US. This leaves the question: why is the American preference for color so much greater than in Europe? I posed this question a long time ago, but nobody could come up with an explanation. Anybody has one? Jos Vermaseren