aboutbeyondlogin

exploring and collecting history online — science, technology, and industry

advanced

The History of Video Games

Submitted by Anonymous on Thu, 11/08/2007 - 20:21.
  • Computers/Information Technology
  • Consumer Technology
  • Contemporary (Post-WWII)
  • Corporation
  • Secondary Source
URL: 

http://www.gamespot.com/gamespot/features/video/hov/

Author: 
Leonard Herman, Jer Horwitz, Steve Kent, and Skyler Miller
Excerpt: 

In 1949, a young engineer named Ralph Baer was given an assignment to build a television set. He wasn't supposed to build just any television set, but one that would be the absolute best of all televisions. This was not a problem for Baer, but he wanted to go beyond his original assignment and incorporate some kind of game into the set. He didn't know exactly what kind of game he had in mind, but it didn't really matter because his managers nixed the idea. It would take another 18 years for his idea to become a reality, and by that time there would be other people to share in the glory, like Willy Higinbotham, who designed an interactive tennis game played on an oscilloscope, and Steve Russell, who programmed a rudimentary space game on a DEC PDP-1 mainframe computer. And then there was also Nolan Bushnell, who played that space game and dreamed of a time when fairground midways would be filled with games powered by computers.

Echo is a project of the Center for History and New Media, George Mason University
© Copyright 2008 Center for History and New Media