Atari Co-Founder Ted Dabney Dies at Age 81 (eurogamer.net)
An anonymous reader quotes Eurogamer:
Atari co-founder Ted Dabney has died, according to a close friend. Historian Leonard Herman, who told Dabney's story in an article for Edge magazine published in 2009, announced Dabney's death in a post on Facebook... Dabney, who was born in San Francisco in 1937, was diagnosed with esophageal cancer in late 2017, and, according to friends, decided against treatment after being told he had eight months to live.
In 1971 Dabney co-founded Atari predecessor Syzygy with Nolan Bushnell and developed Computer Space, the world's first commercially available arcade video game. In 1972 the pair co-founded Atari, and Computer Space was used for the basis of Pong, the video game that made the company its early-days millions. Dabney later left the company after a falling out with Bushnell.
"Nolan was not being the kind of person that I enjoyed being around any more..." Dabney remembered in a 2012 interview with the Computer History Museum. He added with a laugh that "Nolan had told me that if I didn't sell out he would transfer all the assets to another corporation and leave me with nothing anyway. So, you know, might as well sell out."
After the falling out Dabney still helped Bushnell launch Pizza Time Theater (the predecessor of Chuck E. Cheese's), later working at major tech companies like Raytheon, Fujitsu, and Teledyne, before finally buying a grocery store in California's Sierra mountains (where "my wife did all the work"). He eventually retired to northern Washington at the age of 69.
"Ted Dabney was an integral part of the early video game industry, and he literally assembled some of the hardware from which this industry was built with his own two hands," remembers Kotaku, adding "Not many people can lay claim to that kind of legacy."
Share your own favorite memories of Atari and Ted Dabney in the comments.
In 1971 Dabney co-founded Atari predecessor Syzygy with Nolan Bushnell and developed Computer Space, the world's first commercially available arcade video game. In 1972 the pair co-founded Atari, and Computer Space was used for the basis of Pong, the video game that made the company its early-days millions. Dabney later left the company after a falling out with Bushnell.
"Nolan was not being the kind of person that I enjoyed being around any more..." Dabney remembered in a 2012 interview with the Computer History Museum. He added with a laugh that "Nolan had told me that if I didn't sell out he would transfer all the assets to another corporation and leave me with nothing anyway. So, you know, might as well sell out."
After the falling out Dabney still helped Bushnell launch Pizza Time Theater (the predecessor of Chuck E. Cheese's), later working at major tech companies like Raytheon, Fujitsu, and Teledyne, before finally buying a grocery store in California's Sierra mountains (where "my wife did all the work"). He eventually retired to northern Washington at the age of 69.
"Ted Dabney was an integral part of the early video game industry, and he literally assembled some of the hardware from which this industry was built with his own two hands," remembers Kotaku, adding "Not many people can lay claim to that kind of legacy."
Share your own favorite memories of Atari and Ted Dabney in the comments.
RIP, dude.
I don't suffer from insanity, I enjoy every minute of it! --Longbottle
WITHOUT STEVE JOBS
We now have daily obituaries. Thanks slashdot, can now cancel my remaining magazines subscriptions.
Slashdot, fix the reply notifications... You won't get away with it...
Always amazes me when people think console games were a Japanese innovation. It's Japan. They don't do innovation. They built their entire economy on ripping off Atari and Betty Boop.
Your post was in Top 10 Anime Betrayals
Kawaii desu ne~~~~
Japan do plenty of innovation. Especially in the console gaming arena. Though no they did not INVENT console gaming, your ignorance though is astounding.
Dabney Colman?
One of the best ways to introduce sinners to Jesus is through Jack Chick tracts.
Let's home Ted Dabney found Jesus before it was too late! Everyone enjoys the easy to read comic book style tracts that has made Jack Chick famous the world over.
You can help save others like Ted by distributing Jack Chick tracts. Let's hope Ted had a chance to read this one Last Rites.
If it weren't for folks like Dabney or Jobs, technology will still be buried behind some thick walls at the back-offices.
They formed the bridges and bring forth technologies to the forefront of the societies.
If not for video games I wouldn't have focused my curiosity in electronics / computers, and I am sure I am not the only beneficiary.
Thank you, Mr. Dabney, and all other tech pioneers, for your great works !!
"Uwaga, wlaczamy faze". Sorry for a foreign language only reference on an English-speaking site, but this just has to be said. :p
The creatures outside looked from Alt-Right to Antifa; but already it was impossible to say which was which.
Many stupid millenials think Atari was Japanese!
Ted Dabney deliberately chose the name Atari because it fits Japanese phonology and would be mistaken for a Japanese brand.
He succeeded, except for you.
Never owned an Atari as a child, but was incredibly envious of kids whose parents could afford to get them one :-( :-)
Loved and played the SHIT out of River Raid on friends' "console". One of my favourite games of all time
I remember it well, if you beat the saucers you got extra time and the graphics reversed colors. A very 70's "futuristic" cabinet and simple graphics, but then all video games of that era relied more on game play than graphics; given the processor power available. I fed it far too many quarters, along with Pong and later Space Invaders. One interesting thing about some of the early games were programming glitches, such as a tabletop football game that, if your QB crossed the line of scrimmage and then ran back, would result in pass defenders moving away from receivers towards the QB as if it were running, allowing you to throw a completed pass. A racing game if you left the track and looped back counted it as a completed lap.
I'm a consultant - I convert gibberish into cash-flow.
The word "Atari" is meant to essentially mean "watch out" or "I'm gonna get you" in a game of Go. You utter it before totally pwning your opponent.
Everyone else had a Nintendo but at 7 years old I was glad to have the Atari. It came (used from a garage sale) with a small briefcase full of games so even though we were lower income I felt like I had quite a bit. One of the earliest birthdays was at a Chuck E. Cheese and in my small town we had a couple until they went in decline just before the Millennium. Ted Dabney, I had no idea who you were until today, but to honor your effect on my chlidhood I spent 20 minutes logging into an account I created when I was 14 years old. RIP! Maybe one day Slashdot will allow an occasional name change.
I think it is time to get rid of the Anonymous postings for a few months, maybe the trolls and racists will find greener pastures. Seriously, this place used to be good...hardly anyone swore and the comments were by-and-large insightful or at least funny.
Maybe everyone here is too young to know who Ted Dabney was, or even what Atari was, but please have a shred of respect for a pioneer in the gaming industry.
So now I'm doubly sad... one for Ted, one for Slashdot, my (formerly) favorite website.
My mother worked on the assembly line for the Atari 2600, one of the jobs she did while there was running the wave solder machine. One day there was a problem and she needed to clear the machine. Unfortunately there was also apparently a problem with the interlock switches and while her hand was in the machine a wave of solder (hence the name of the beast) came along and soldered the rings on her fingers together. Burned her fingers pretty good, too. Nothing to with Ted Dabney, though, since he was long gone by the time this went down.
But that was when we still made electronics in the Bay Area.
In American the words meaning is derived from the phrase 'Look at that big stack of Atari 600's for only 30 bucks each, and nobody is buying them!'