Inventor of the World's First Game
Ralph H. Baer, born March 8, 1922, a German-born American who lived in since childhood. Being a television engineer who was still rare, Ralph created a game on television at that time he was working around the year 1966, the company named Sanders.
This invention was developed to become the first gaming console protoip called the Brown Box, and patented in 1968. This patent has been getting a lot of exams that are still recorded correctly as the first video games. The patent was licensed by Magnavox Oddysey which makes him the world's first console game in 1972.
Soon Baer also found a gun control to video games can be played on television, is also the first in the world, used in the Magnavox Oddysey.
Ralph Baer at Sanders continued to work until his retirement in 1987. Since 1983, Baer with his friends to create some of the equipment under the name of the game MicroPROS Technology Solutions. Baer is also a lifetime member of the senior engineers of the IEEE society.
For his contribution to world development and technology, Ralph Baer get National Medal of Technology from George Bush on February 13, 2006, upon discovery that started the era of the video game industry.
This invention was developed to become the first gaming console protoip called the Brown Box, and patented in 1968. This patent has been getting a lot of exams that are still recorded correctly as the first video games. The patent was licensed by Magnavox Oddysey which makes him the world's first console game in 1972.
Soon Baer also found a gun control to video games can be played on television, is also the first in the world, used in the Magnavox Oddysey.
Ralph Baer at Sanders continued to work until his retirement in 1987. Since 1983, Baer with his friends to create some of the equipment under the name of the game MicroPROS Technology Solutions. Baer is also a lifetime member of the senior engineers of the IEEE society.
For his contribution to world development and technology, Ralph Baer get National Medal of Technology from George Bush on February 13, 2006, upon discovery that started the era of the video game industry.