Once upon a time there was a man named Ralph Henry Baer and he was a German-born American video game developer, inventor, and engineer, and was known as "The Father of Video Games" due to his many contributions to games and the video game industry in the latter half of the 20th century. Born in Germany, he and his family fled to the United States before the outbreak of World War II,
where he changed his name and later served the American war effort.
Afterwards, he pursued work in electronics. In 1951, while working at
Loral, he was asked to build "the best television set in the world". He
proposed the idea of playing games on television screens, but his boss
rejected it. Later in 1966, while working at Sanders Associates,
his 1951 idea came back to his mind, and he would go on to develop
eight hardware prototypes. The last two (the Brown Box and its de/dt
extension) would become the first home video game console, the Magnavox Odyssey. He would contribute to the development of other consoles and consumer game units. In February, 2006, he was awarded the National Medal of Technology
for "his groundbreaking and pioneering creation, development and
commercialization of interactive video games, which spawned related
uses, applications, and mega-industries in both the entertainment and
education realms". Baer was born in 1922 to Lotte (Kirschbaum) and Leo Baer, a Jewish
family living in Germany, and was originally named Rudolf Heinrich
Baer. At age 11, he was expelled from school because of his ancestry and
had to go to an all-Jewish school. His father worked in a shoe factory
in Pirmasens at the time. Baer's family, fearing increasing persecution, moved from Germany to New York City in 1938 two months prior to Kristallnacht while Baer was a teenager. Baer would later become a naturalized United States citizen. In the United States, he was self-taught and worked in a factory for a
weekly wage of twelve dollars; upon seeing an advertisement at a bus
station for education in the budding electronics field, he quit his job
to study in the field. He graduated from the National Radio Institute as a radio service technician in 1940. In 1943 he was drafted to fight in World War II and assigned to military intelligence at the United States Army headquarters in London. With his secondary education funded by the G.I. Bill, Baer graduated with a Bachelor of Science degree in Television Engineering (unique at the time) from the American Television Institute of Technology in Chicago in 1949. In 1949, Baer went to work as chief engineer for a small electro-medical
equipment firm, Wappler, Inc., where he designed and built surgical
cutting machines, epilators, and low frequency pulse generating muscle-toning equipment. In 1951, Baer went to work as a senior engineer for Loral Electronics in Bronx, New York, where he designed power line carrier signaling equipment for IBM. From 1952 to 1956, he worked at Transitron, Inc., in New York City as a chief engineer and later as vice president. He started his own company before joining defense contractor Sanders Associates in Nashua, New Hampshire (now part of BAE Systems Inc.) in 1956, where he stayed until retiring in 1987.
Baer's primary responsibility at Sanders was overseeing about 500
engineers in the development of electronic systems for military
applications. However, out of this work came the concept of a home video game console;
he would go on to create the basis for the first commercial units,
among several other patented advances in video games and electronic
toys. Baer married Dena Whinston in 1952; she died in 2006. They had three
children during their marriage, and at the time of Baer's death, he had
four grandchildren. Baer died at his home in Manchester, New Hampshire on December 6, 2014, according to family and friends close to him. With this being so and so much more to learn about Ralph Henry Baer i would have to say he is on my list for one of the most interesting inventors of all time.
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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The End
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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