Steve Jobs named most influential person in gaming!
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Re: Steve Jobs named most influential person in gaming!
I will agree with 2, 3, and 4. For those that dont know, Tim Berners-Lee created the internet before Al Gore, and hosted the first webserver.
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Re: Steve Jobs named most influential person in gaming!
YoshiEgg25 wrote:And not a single man remembered Nolan Bushnell.
Exactly what I was just thinking and what about the Atari 2600? Plus Steve wozniak with the apple II or all the other major people from back then that started it all like Jay Miner with the original Atari computers and the Amiga?
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Re: Steve Jobs named most influential person in gaming!
ATARI800XLfan wrote:YoshiEgg25 wrote:And not a single man remembered Nolan Bushnell.
Exactly what I was just thinking and what about the Atari 2600? Plus Steve wozniak with the apple II or all the other major people from back then that started it all like Jay Miner with the original Atari computers and the Amiga?
To be fair to Jobs, he did create Breakout, which was one of the first "breakout" hit games (pun sadly intended). However, I bet that there was not one person who voted for him that knew that.
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Nibbler (marathon): 251,169,160 / Nibbler (one life): 5,263,360 (WR)
Donkey Kong: 423,100 [L12-1] (150th place as of 2019-01-15)
Super Smash Bros. (N64): Ranked top 5 in Wisconsin from Q1 2016 to Q2 2017
Shrek SuperSlam: won largest tournament in game's history (Shrekfest 2018)
Speedrun.com Profile (contains multiple WRs)
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Re: Steve Jobs named most influential person in gaming!
YoshiEgg25 wrote:To be fair to Jobs, he did create Breakout,
well...
wikipedia wrote:History and development
Breakout, a discrete logic (non-microprocessor) game, was conceptualized by Nolan Bushnell and Steve Bristow, after the latter had "rejoined" Atari after the merge of Atari subsidiary Kee Games.
They had an idea to turn Pong into a single player game, where the player would use a ball to deplete a wall of bricks without missing the ball on its rebound. Bushnell was certain the game would be popular, and the two partnered to produce a concept. Al Alcorn was assigned as the project manager, and began development with Cyan Engineering in 1975. The same year, Alcorn assigned Steve Jobs to design a prototype. Jobs was offered US$750, with an extra $100 each time a chip was eliminated from the prospected design. Jobs promised to complete a prototype within four days.
Jobs noticed his friend Steve Wozniak—employee of Hewlett-Packard—was capable of producing designs with a small number of chips, and invited him to work on the hardware design with the prospect of splitting the $750 wage. Wozniak had no sketches and instead interpreted the game from its description. To save parts, he had "tricky little designs" difficult to understand for most engineers. Near the end of development, Wozniak considered moving the high score to the screen's top, but Jobs claimed Bushnell wanted it at the bottom; Wozniak was unaware of any truth to his claims. The original deadline was met after Wozniak did not sleep for four days straight. In the end 50 chips were removed from Jobs' original design. This equated to a US$5,000 bonus, which Jobs kept secret from Wozniak, instead only paying him $375.[1][2][3][4][5][6]
Atari was unable to use Steve Wozniak's design. By designing the board with as few chips as possible, he also cut down the amount of TTL (transistor-transistor logic) chips to 42. This made the design difficult to manufacture—it was too compact and complicated to be feasible with Atari's manufacturing methods. However, Wozniak claims Atari could not understand the design, and speculates "maybe some engineer there was trying to make some kind of modification to it". Atari ended up designing their own version for production, which contained about 100 TTL chips. Wozniak found the gameplay to be the same as his original creation, and could not find any differences.[2][3][4][5][7][8]
Re: Steve Jobs named most influential person in gaming!
Jobs took the credit, and most of the money for the work done by a talented engineer. He truly is the most influential person in gaming.
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Re: Steve Jobs named most influential person in gaming!
Hatta wrote:Jobs took the credit, and most of the money for the work done by a talented engineer.
Didn't he always?
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Re: Steve Jobs named most influential person in gaming!
Shigeru Miyamoto and Ralph H. Baer are my 1 and 2, though I'll be the first to admit I don't know too much about video game history.
Oh, and Ralph Baer gets bonus points from me for writing a great rebuttal to an Irate Gamer video haha.
Oh, and Ralph Baer gets bonus points from me for writing a great rebuttal to an Irate Gamer video haha.
Re: Steve Jobs named most influential person in gaming!
AVGN and even the Irate Gamer have had more influence in gaming than Jobs.
Re: Steve Jobs named most influential person in gaming!
GryeDor wrote:AVGN and even the Irate Gamer have had more influence in gaming than Jobs.
Whoa. Now we're going over board.
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