“Atemp” isn’t a single, universally known term, but depending on context it usually refers to one of a few things:

1. Atemp as a brand / product name

In recent usage online, Atemp most often shows up as a brand name rather than a dictionary word. For example, there is:

  • Atemp as the name of a SaaS-style website template or platform aimed at helping manage social media and marketing analytics, emphasizing reporting, audience understanding, and workflow automation.
  • Atemp as a brand used in music-gear contexts, such as the ATEMP MC1 MIDI controller produced by “ATEMP Production,” a hardware controller for sending and receiving MIDI messages over DIN and USB, with features like octave shifting, transposition, program change selection (1–128), “All Notes Off,” MIDI channel selection, and aftertouch assignment.

So if you saw “Atemp” on a tech, web, or music site, it’s likely a brand or product name , not a regular English word.

2. ATEMP as an acronym

In some technical or documentation contexts, ATEMP appears in all caps as an acronym. One example expands it as “Asset TEMP” in acronym directories, where it functions as a shorthand label (for instance in internal systems or asset tracking) rather than a word with a normal-language meaning.

Because acronyms are domain-specific, in other fields ATEMP could be defined differently, so you’d usually need the surrounding context (finance, engineering, IT, etc.) to know exactly what it means.

3. Possible confusion with “attempt” or “a tempo”

You might also be seeing atemp as:

  • A typo or shorthand for “attempt” , the common English word meaning “to try to do something” or “an effort to achieve something”.
  • A near-match to “a tempo” , the musical instruction (Italian) meaning to return to the original speed in a piece of music; some people compress or misspell it in casual writing.

Because the exact meaning depends heavily on where you saw it (forum, tech site, music gear, etc.), the safest interpretation is:

  • If it’s in a logo or product page → probably a brand name (SaaS tool, template, or device).
  • If it’s in technical docs in all caps (ATEMP) → likely an acronym such as “Asset TEMP” or something domain-specific.
  • If it’s in running English text and looks like a misspelling → probably meant to be “attempt”.

If you paste the exact sentence or link where you saw “atemp,” I can narrow it to the most likely meaning for that specific context.