In 2012, the
Atari Calculator was highlighted in an article published in the
ABBUC Magazin (Issue #111), which was published by the German-based, Atari Bit Byter User Club e.V., and the styled
Atari Calculator title was featured on the cover. Cover design and fan art illustrations assisting the article authored by Oliver Rapp. Cover illustration also includes a sign in a lower right corner in a form of mathematical formula to say "
Thank you", used by Atari community to honor notable contributors: \sum_{i=0}^\infty(Thank\;you\;Carol)_i Rapp also designed a label for the possible future
ROM cartridge release of the
Atari Calculator, reserving ID number CXL-4028. On 27—28 April 2013, the
Atari Calculator was displayed at the 14th
Vintage Computer Festival Europe (VCFe) in
Munich, and Vortrag Wassenberg made its presentation. Slides from this presentation were published online. On 22 November 2013, Peter Dell released a ROM cartridge version of the modified original
Atari Calculator with adding
startup screen, as a personal gift sent to Carol Shaw: In 2013, Norbert Kehrer ported the original
Atari Calculator to
Commodore 64. On 5 November 2014, the
Atari Calculator was highlighted on the 'Inverse
ATASCII Podcast'. The podcast site also published the source of the example program for the
Atari Calculator, newly created
cheat sheet, screenshots of software screen in various modes and an excerpt from the original user manual showing a mistake on instruction illustration.
Colleen Calculator On 31 August 2016, Kay Savetz, the host of the 'ANTIC podcast', uploaded at the
Internet Archive the scans of the
Colleen Calculator source printouts, an unreleased cartridge version of the
Atari Calculator — obtained from Harry Stewart — which was originally presented by Carol Shaw. In addition, two source printiouts, which included code for
floating-point arithmetic handling, were scanned and uploaded the
Atari Calculator cartridge specification, handwritten by Shaw, and the official printed user manual for the
Atari Calculator. Savetz uploaded it all with a permission from Shaw, and the original printouts Shaw had donated to and now are storing at the
Strong Museum, as well as all of the materials related to Atari, she collected during her employment period at the Atari (1978–1980). On 29 June 2017, Shaw was hosted by Savetz on the
"ANTIC" podcast. During the interview, Shaw described more details about the
Atari Calculator and the
Colleen Calculator development. On 4 September 2020, Savetz released on
GitHub source files of the
Colleen Calculator, recovered and reconstructed from scanned printouts. The header in source files includes info on the initial commit date by Shaw: The name of the
Colleen Calculator refers to the codename of Atari 800 — the "
Colleen". == Gallery ==