Ralph Baer On Atari/Pong Lawsuit, Birth Of Gaming
Roosevelt Franklin writes "GamerDad.com put up
a great interview with videogaming pioneer Ralph Baer today. He talks about the birth of the game industry, the Brown Box (Magnavox Odyssey), the Atari/Pong lawsuit, his patents, and a parent's responsibility. Baer is the original Game God and GamerDad calls him the Original GamerDad too!" Baer says of Pong and patent infringement: "After ten years of litigation in courts from Chicago to San Francisco we collected many tens of millions of dollars."
If this news item had SCO in the title, there'd be at least 67 messages by now.
Don't blame Durga. I voted for Centauri.
If I'm going to be paying $699, *I'm* not going to be the one touching my 'joystick.'
"We won our lawsuits because our patents covered both what is termed "means plus function"...i.e. we showed in the patents and claimed the concepts of the interaction of machine controlled screen symbols (such as a ball) and player controlled symbols such as the player paddles (the functions). We also showed how this interaction could be accomplished (the means). Any game made by a manufacturer that exhibited the type of interaction defined by our patents was found to be infringing..."
Translated:
Gamer Dad: "It's a game, see, where you hit a "ball" with a "paddle". Those are the functions."
Patent examiner: "That already exists. It is called "tennis". Or "ping pong" if you like."
Gamer Dad: "But I haven't told you the means yet! You do this... with A COMPUTER!"
Patent examiner: "You hit the ball with a computer?"
Game Dad: "No! No! The paddle and ball are both on the computer screen!"
Patent examiner: "Whoah! That's novel! If that isn't worth a patent, I don't know what is!"
Gamer Dad: "Then there is my second idea. You run towards a gorilla who is throwing barrels at you."
Patent examiner: "Is that a game?"
Gamer Dad: "And you do this... on A COMPUTER!"
Patent examiner faints from so much innovative power.
I love the way the guy gets pissed off at the assumption his Brown Box was an analog computer, and then the interviewer goes on to state that his game box was Analog again and again!
heh