ANTIC Interview 345 - Youth Advisory Board: Musa Mustafa

Published: May 29, 2018, 7 a.m.

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Youth Advisory Board: Musa Mustafa
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This is the fifth in a series of episodes featuring interviews with the kids of Atari\'s Youth Advisory Board. If you\'re just joining us: In 1983, Atari formed a Youth Advisory Board, selecting 20 kids, aged 14 though 18, from around the U.S. to share their opinions about computers, test software, and promote Atari\'s computers at events.\\xa0
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This is an interview with Musa Mustafa, who was one of those kids.\\xa0
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A March 25, 1983 article in the Santa Cruz Sentinel by Loretta Noffsinger said:
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"Computers without keyboards, toys that come to life at the sound of a child\'s voice and programs that shoulder the chores of thank-you letters \\u2014 that\'s what the whiz kids see in the future. They envision a computer disguised within a toy to tell youngsters about the workings of the universe and others \'far beyond man\\u2019s imagination.\' And Atari is listening to them."
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Later in the article, Noffsinger wrote: "Musa Mustafa, 15, says he hopes to design an astronomy program to chart the location of stars and planets at specific times \\u2018so that I can easily track them down in a telescope.\' The Walnut sophomore, who will skip his junior year at Rowland High School, also envisions computers designing computers. This year, they\'re helping him make a movie about the 1984 Olympics. A combination of computer animation and film, the endeavor will \'open a new category\' in the Los Angeles International Film Exposition this spring, he says."
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My interview with Musa took place on April 26, 2018. In it, we discuss Ted Kahn, whom I previously interviewed.\\xa0
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