Connect with us

Hi, what are you looking for?

Jewish Business News

Life-Style Health

Inventor of Home Video Games Ralph Baer Dead at 92

Ralph Baer

The man credited with inventing the first home video games, Ralph Baer, died on Saturday at age 92 at his home in Manchester, New Hampshire, a director at the Goodwin Funeral Home said on Monday.

Baer, who fled his native Germany with his family in 1938 ahead of the Second World War, spent much of his career working on advanced radar systems for a defense company before turning his attention to interactive video games in the late 1960s.

Please help us out :
Will you offer us a hand? Every gift, regardless of size, fuels our future.
Your critical contribution enables us to maintain our independence from shareholders or wealthy owners, allowing us to keep up reporting without bias. It means we can continue to make Jewish Business News available to everyone.
You can support us for as little as $1 via PayPal at [email protected].
Thank you.

Baer’s first video game console, dubbed The Brown Box, made its debut in 1972, and was later licensed by Magnavox as the Odyssey game system. It included the game Table Tennis, a forerunner to Pong, which was one of the first video games to achieve mainstream popularity.

Baer also invented the iconic memory game Simon, a circular toy with four colored tiles that flashed in a pattern.

Baer continued working from his home workshop through the 2000s and was awarded a National Medal of Technology in 2006 by then-president George W. Bush.

Baer told PBS in a 2013 interview that inventing was what kept him going into old age. “All of my friends have died. What am I going to do? I need a challenge, ” he said. “I’m basically an artist. I’m no different than a painter who sits there and loves what he does.”

Baer joined the U.S. Army shortly after settling in New York City, serving from 1943 to 1946, much of the time as an intelligence officer in Europe, according to Baer’s website. He was married in 1952 and had three children.

Baer wrote a book published in 2005 called “Videogames: In the Beginning” in which he staked his claim as the “inventor of home video games.”

Apple co-founder Steve Wozniak said in a review of the book that he could “never thank Ralph enough for what he gave to me and everyone else.”

The Brown Box is now on display at the Smithsonian in Washington, D.C., which houses a full collection of Baer’s documents. The museum plans to make Baer’s workshop part of a special exhibit on innovation next year.



Newsletter



You May Also Like

World News

In the 15th Nov 2015 edition of Israel’s good news, the highlights include:   ·         A new Israeli treatment brings hope to relapsed leukemia...

Life-Style Health

Medint’s medical researchers provide data-driven insights to help patients make decisions; It is affordable- hundreds rather than thousands of dollars

Entertainment

The Movie The Professional is what made Natalie Portman a Lolita.

History & Archeology

A groundbreaking discovery in the Manot Cave in the Western Galilee, Israel has unearthed the earliest evidence in the Levant (and among the world's...