The System That Predates The Fairchild
Moderator: Moderators
-
FDSMAN
- Posts: 1103
- Joined: Thu Mar 03, 2005 6:54 pm
- Location: uh some where over there and around the corner to down and up there
- Contact:
The System That Predates The Fairchild


if you would like to donate to my ps2p portable pm me
Ever wonder what came before the Odyssey 2?
<a href="http://profile.mygamercard.net/soundwave348">
<img src="http://card.mygamercard.net/gel/soundwave348.png">
</a>
<img src="http://card.mygamercard.net/gel/soundwave348.png">
</a>
-
nos_slived
- Higher Idiot
- Posts: 3476
- Joined: Mon Mar 21, 2005 6:32 pm
- Location: Burnaby, BC, Canada
- Contact:
-
Triton
- Moderator
- Posts: 7398
- Joined: Mon May 24, 2004 12:33 pm
- 360 GamerTag: triton199
- Steam ID: triton199
- Location: Iowa
- Contact:
the first comercially available video game was computer space http://www.klov.com/C/Computer_Space.html
Visit us at Portablesofdoom.org
The first video game was developed by William A. Higinbotham in 1958. The game was Tennis for Two, a game similar to the later game variant Pong. It was a two-player game, viewed on an oscilloscope, and controlled by two controllers handcrafted by Higinbotham out of spare metal boxes each with a dial and a button. Little is known as to how the game was played, but most speculate that the dial controlled gravity and the button acted as the paddle. The game wasn’t designed as a game, but more as a test, so it wasn’t fun like a game by today’s standards.
In 1960, Steve Russell, Wayne Witanen, and J. Martin Graetz, students at MIT got the idea to use one of the school’s new “monitorsâ€
In 1960, Steve Russell, Wayne Witanen, and J. Martin Graetz, students at MIT got the idea to use one of the school’s new “monitorsâ€
-Luke

