Father of Pong Honored At White House
Gamasutra reports that Ralph Baer, the man whose work inspired the game Pong, will be honored in a White House ceremony on February 14th. He is to receive the 2004 National Medal of Technology. From the article: "The award, which is America's highest honor for science and technology, goes to those who 'have helped commercialize new technologies, create jobs, improve American productivity, and stimulate the Nation's economic growth and development', and was established by Congress in 1980."
http://bash.org/?9322
. . | . . .
<tag> Ouroboros: lets play Pong
<Ouroboros> Ok.
<tag> |
<Ouroboros>
<tag> |
<Ouroboros> . |
<tag> |
<Ouroboros> |
<Ouroboros> Whoops
Is that a typo or is the government really that slow now?
Ralph Baer created, documented, and patented the process for a Pong-like game well before Atari created and released Pong. Nolan Bushnell's Atari lost a court case that established the primacy of Magnavox's initial invention, gave Atari full rights to Pong-line games, and actually required Atari (not Magnavox) to go after other rip-offs. Oh, and Atari had to kick Magnavox some dough, of course.
According to Nolan, he had Al Alcorn create Pong as essentially a programming exercise, which may or may not be true, but it's immaterial to Ralph Baer's legitimate claim to have invented Pong (Nolan popularized videogames, and that's a fine legacy too). It is clear that Nolan had previously seen the Magnavox Pong, so he may have remembered the concept.
In any case, it wasn't trivial to build Pong, whether your were Ralph Baer, Nolan Bushnell, or Al Alcorn. Pong doesn't even have a CPU, it's just a state machine, and it's not something that was obvious or easy to do with the available (non-military) hardware of the early 70s.
So, frankly, STFU, before you start dissing on Ralph Baer, who is one of the most unsung, yet most important, contributers to the videogame age ever.
Dude, I think I can see my house from here.