Many people have contributed over time to the AtariWiki. In this page, we want to thank special contributors for their work preserving Atari and 6502 Programming information.
Clinton W. Parker is the creator of the Action! computer language. He has given us the source code of his outstanding language.
Thank you so much Mr. Parker!
Carol B. Shaw, creator of River Raid, 3D Tic-Tac-Toe, Calculator and many other programs.
Thank you so much Carol, you will be in our hearts forever! We will never forget you! :-)))
Alfred has preserved the Action! source code from being lost and shred it with us, after the o. k. from the creator, Clinton W. Parker. Further, he shared with the Atari community rare Action! programs, which were lost over the decades. He is vital for the Atari community.
Thank you Alfred!
Thank you so much bob1200xl for sharing the Basic XL source code with us!
Allan plays a major role in preserving many Atari programs, especially those, who seems to be lost. Without him the restore of the Atari Program Exchange (APX) would not be possible. Allan has further access to programs, which are not even on the far end of the rarity list! Without his contributions Atari would be significant poorer and many problems couldn't been solved. Allan please go ahead, we deeply need you.
James Bradford helped to preserve the Atari Personal Financial Management System (P.F.M.S.) box CX406
Curt Vendel was a former Atari employee(?) and provides us with extreme rare information, files etc. who are essential for the restore of Atari's past.
Roland is one of the main contributors to this wiki, he is tireless chasing for lost items, the 'Indiana Jones' of Atari history. Roland was essential in bringing back the Atari Calculator, parts of Action!, BUG/65 and many Atari application programs. Further, the 'Atari Educational System' program with big contributions from Allan Bushman and the complete 'Voice & Data Cassette' language program, which were never be possible without the contributions from Stefan Meyer and Peter Dell. He plays a major role in getting Atari source codes.
Thank you Roland!