Ralph H. Baer, a Father of Video Gaming, Dies At 92
SternisheFan writes with news that Ralph H Baer, the father of video games and the inventor of the Magnavox Odyssey, has passed away at 92. "At the dawn of the television age in 1951, a young engineer named Ralph Baer approached executives at an electronics firm and suggested the radical idea of offering games on the bulky TV boxes. 'And of course,' he said, 'I got the regular reaction: "Who needs this?" And nothing happened.' It took another 15 years before Mr. Baer, who died Dec. 6 at 92, developed a prototype that would make him the widely acknowledged father of video games. His design helped lay the groundwork for an industry that transformed the role of the television set and generated tens of billions of dollars last year. Mr. Baer 'saw that there was this interesting device sitting in millions of American homes — but it was a one-way instrument,' said Arthur P. Molella, director of the Smithsonian Institution's Lemelson Center for the Study of Invention and Innovation. 'He said, "Maybe there's some way we can interact with this thing."'"
Read to improve your mind. Learn a craft. Educate your children instead of relying on the government to indoctrinate them. Maintain and improve your property. Fix something yourself instead of calling on the town/city/state to fix it. Give time to charity. Learn economics and history so that your vote doesn't cause damage. Get to know your neighbors. Go to a museum. Explore. Think of a difficult problem, design fixes for it, then figure out what's wrong with the fixes.
Contribute to civilization: ari.aynrand.org/donate