On 1 June 2013 13:18, Martin Goldberg <wgungfu at gmail.com> wrote:
This is a non-issue publicity stunt. We already
cleared that up in our
book "Atari Inc. - Business Is Fun" released last fall, going by
direct interviews and actual internal documents.
There were never thousands of ET games buried in Alamorgodo, that's a
myth that sprung up later and was also never once mentioned by the
actual press articles of the time. The dump there was simply a
clearing out of Atari's Texas manufacturing plant as it transitioned
to automated production methods and a focus on personal computer
manufacturing. It had previously been one of the main plants for
manufacturing of game cartridges and other hardware, and game
manufacturing was being moved overseas to China.
As part of the transition the unused cartridge stock of a group of
titles (not just E.T.), console parts and computer parts were all
dumped there in New Mexico. It was covered in detail by the Alamogordo
press at the time as well, and is just such a non-mystery that I'm
surprised by all this.
Please bottom-quote. It's dead easy in Gmail, even in "new compose" -
just press Ctrl-A to "select all" then trim & reply beneath.
Anyway, reading between the lines, it seems clear where all those ETs
went, anyway.
Area 51.
--
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