Ad: Click Here

The Digital Antic Project About the Digital Antic Project


Antic magazine was one of the very best magazines devoted to 8-bit Atari computers. Antic, like Atari computers, has been forgotten by all but a small minority...

The Digital Antic Project is a small crusade to put all of the old issues of Antic, and its sister magazines STart and Antic Amiga Plus, on the Internet. The head of the project, Kevin Savetz, has received permission from the publisher to make the material available on the Internet for free. This site launched with its first two issues of Antic on July 27, 1996, and finished with the 88th issue on September 17, 2000. Now, we're working on STart and Antic Amiga Plus.

If you'd like to help by scanning, HTMLizing, proofreading or doing something else, send me mail! If you wrote for Antic, STart, Antic Amiga Plus, or were involved in producing any Atari-related products at all, we want to hear from you.

This archive is being created by scanning and OCRing (Optical Character Recognition) the magazines. You may find that the OCR process has introduced typos into the text. In addition to the text, the vast majority of software published in Antic is also available for download. You'll need an Atari or an emulator to use them.

Copyright

The magazine text and images in this archive are copyright © 1982-1991 by Antic Magazine, and are used with permission. The advertisments in the ad gallery are copyright © by their respective advertisers and are used without permission. Everything else is copyright © 2000 by Kevin Savetz Publishing. Enjoy the material on this Web site, but don't repost it anywhere, and don't use it for commercial purposes. Kapiche?

Thanks to...

This project would not be possible without the permission of James Capparell, publisher of Antic. By the way, James is now publisher of Mac Home Journal magazine.

Thanks to Mark L. Simonson (for his graphic artistry,) Bob Janice, Michael Current (Atari god,) Henry Hahlbohm (scanning maniac,) Allan Bushman (another scanning maniac,) Willi Kusche (assembly language guru,) Ron HamiIton (who has more patience than you or I can ever hope to have,) Matthew Pike (PHP guy,) and all of the other volunteers.


Return to the archive home page