*********************** CREDITS *******************************************

It is rather impossible to write a larger software project without the
direct or indirect help from "outside". Atari++ is of course no
difference in this respect. This file collects various people I'd like to
thank for their help in making this software possible.

- pps for redesigning the Atari++ home page and hosting the whole
  project. Unfortunately, my employer can no longer host it when
  I moved.

- Phaeron for documenting many undocumented chipset and CPU features
  and for answering all my questions.

- Waldemar Pawlaszek for finding and fixing several bugs in the 65C02
  CPU emulation.

- Sebastian Pachuta (again!) for pointing me at some bugs in the player
  missile timing logic. It is still not perfect, but much closer than
  before.

- Bennet (beipdev@yahoo.com) for providing me with very detailed information
  about the antic DMA timing that got incoprorated into the 1.50 release.

- Alexander N. Mller for hunting down bugs concerning the 64 bit and
  FreeBSD port of atari++.

- Don Fanning for helping me debugging the R: RS232 support and sending
  me configurations to reproduce the problem.

- Sebastian Pachuta for reporting a lot of bugs concerning the emulation
  core and providing reproducable errors helping me to fix them.

- Matthias Reichl for the AtariSIO emulation and the help concering the
integration of his kernel interface into the emulator.

- James ("Slor") for his work on the Atari++ win port.

- Mark Keates for the AMD Flash chip support.

- David Firth for his Atari800 emulator. Atari++ is not based on this
  earlier work, though influenced. Atari++ was entirely and completely
  rewritten from scratch, in C++, avoiding some of the constructional
  difficulties of David's work. Especially, the way how graphics output
  is constructed and how player/missile graphic priorities are generated
  is quite different from his implementation.

- Ron Fries for the Pokey emulation routine that got used in early releases of
  the Atari800 emulator. The strategy that has been utilized for sound
  build-up has been used in the pokey emulation of this emulator as well,
  though the implementation details are a bit different and the overall
  quality of the sound emulation has been improved heavily. Specifically,
  high-pass filters, sound muting and anti-aliasing are new to the emulation
  model.

- Jean-loup Gailly and Mark Adler for the Z compression library that gets
  used if available for .gz compressed disk images.

- Sam Lantinga and the SDL group for the Simple DirectMedia Layer library, or
  short, SDL, that offers one of the possible front-ends of the Atari++
  emulator if it is available.

- Petr Stehlik and the remaining atari800 team for cooperation and for working
  out the licencing conditions of this emulator. Specifically, I thank Petr for
  keeping cool in the hot days of working out all the details of making this
  project available.

- Jindroush and the Atari Cartridge Dumping project for providing
  insight into the details of the cart emulation. Specifically, SDX and
  XEGS cart emulation would have been impossible without him.

- Andreas Magenheimer and the ABBUC team for providing some hardware insight
  that was otherwise not available. Specifically, emulation of various bank
  switching logics is due to ABBUC.

- Jason Duerstock's for its analyzation of the RT8 cartridge. Unfortunately,
  something seems to be still not quite right with it. The current 
  implementation in Atari++ uses a somewhat different route how the register
  assignment *might* work. This is all an educated guess, though.

- Steven J. Trucker for the description of the AtariMax flash-ROM cart.
  This is refered to as "Flash" cartridge type.
