@drskyskull I’m reading a reissue of “Worse Things Waiting” right now, and I’ve been meaning to pick up this new edition of John the Balladeer.
Notices by Robert McNees (mcnees@mastodon.social), page 48
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Robert McNees (mcnees@mastodon.social)'s status on Monday, 30-Oct-2023 02:31:31 UTC Robert McNees -
Robert McNees (mcnees@mastodon.social)'s status on Monday, 30-Oct-2023 01:31:38 UTC Robert McNees @alderson Yeah good point, I was careless with that.
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Robert McNees (mcnees@mastodon.social)'s status on Monday, 30-Oct-2023 00:50:19 UTC Robert McNees Closer…
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Robert McNees (mcnees@mastodon.social)'s status on Sunday, 29-Oct-2023 17:27:57 UTC Robert McNees Can anyone fill me in on the #SilentSunday hashtag? Is it just serene photos or is there some other purpose?
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Robert McNees (mcnees@mastodon.social)'s status on Sunday, 29-Oct-2023 15:45:12 UTC Robert McNees They re-sent the “LOGIN” message an hour later, establishing a connection between UCLA and Stanford.
So technically the first three characters transmitted over what would become the internet were “LOL.”
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Robert McNees (mcnees@mastodon.social)'s status on Sunday, 29-Oct-2023 15:38:33 UTC Robert McNees The first message between two computers on ARPANET was sent #OTD in 1969. The “LO” of “LOGIN” was successfully transmitted and then one of the systems crashed.
Charles Kline’s IMP Log: “Talked to SRI host to host.”
Image: UCLA Kleinrock Center for Internet Studies
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Robert McNees (mcnees@mastodon.social)'s status on Sunday, 29-Oct-2023 02:47:17 UTC Robert McNees @level98 No, the spelling was on purpose
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Robert McNees (mcnees@mastodon.social)'s status on Sunday, 29-Oct-2023 01:52:50 UTC Robert McNees The Seer’s Tower
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Robert McNees (mcnees@mastodon.social)'s status on Saturday, 28-Oct-2023 17:01:13 UTC Robert McNees Good morning.
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Robert McNees (mcnees@mastodon.social)'s status on Friday, 27-Oct-2023 22:29:02 UTC Robert McNees @Lynk Oh that’s wonderful!
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Robert McNees (mcnees@mastodon.social)'s status on Friday, 27-Oct-2023 20:06:53 UTC Robert McNees Very close now.
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Robert McNees (mcnees@mastodon.social)'s status on Friday, 27-Oct-2023 04:55:50 UTC Robert McNees A late-evening read for the Halloween season: @tommyyum‘s “We Salted Nannie” in Bitter Southerner.
https://bittersoutherner.com/we-salted-nannie-southern-ghost-story
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Robert McNees (mcnees@mastodon.social)'s status on Thursday, 26-Oct-2023 16:53:06 UTC Robert McNees Yesterday, upon the stair,
I met a man who wasn't there -
Robert McNees (mcnees@mastodon.social)'s status on Thursday, 26-Oct-2023 16:32:31 UTC Robert McNees Getting a little carried away with the halloweenmath package for LaTeX.
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Robert McNees (mcnees@mastodon.social)'s status on Wednesday, 25-Oct-2023 15:06:33 UTC Robert McNees Higinbotham ends his recollections with a passage that basically says “I guess my opinion on video games is have you noticed that 30 years of intense nonproliferation work has failed to slow the nuclear arms race?”
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Robert McNees (mcnees@mastodon.social)'s status on Wednesday, 25-Oct-2023 15:05:09 UTC Robert McNees It's not surprising that Higinbotham essentially repurposed a system meant for modeling missile trajectories. He was a founder and inaugural chair of the Federation of American Scientists.
Like many Manhattan Project scientists, he devoted his life to nuclear nonproliferation.
When he summarized his accomplishments, he preferred to be remembered for his nonproliferation work, radar work during the war, and Manhattan Project contributions. Work on video games was a distant fourth place.
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Robert McNees (mcnees@mastodon.social)'s status on Wednesday, 25-Oct-2023 15:04:11 UTC Robert McNees And here are Higinbotham's recollections, prompted by a 1982 Creative Computing article that called him the inventor of video games.
“Whether or not inventing video games is something to be proud of is another matter.”
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Robert McNees (mcnees@mastodon.social)'s status on Wednesday, 25-Oct-2023 15:02:51 UTC Robert McNees There were other game-like inventions before Tennis for Two, and there's no reason to think it was a profound influence on later game designers. But it might be the first such invention that resembles what we now call video games.
Years later, companies would invoke Higinbotham's invention as "prior art" in commercial lawsuits over video games.
Higinbotham’s deposition from a 1976 court case where lawyers tried to use Tennis for Two to shoot down claims by Magnavox:
https://www.bnl.gov/about/docs/higinbotham_deposition.pdf -
Robert McNees (mcnees@mastodon.social)'s status on Wednesday, 25-Oct-2023 15:00:22 UTC Robert McNees The computer was meant to model missiles, but Higinbotham figured it could just as well model the path of a tennis ball moving under the influence of gravity and air resistance.
So he sketched out an interface, gave it to Dvorak who assembled the system, and then they debugged it together.
The whole thing took just a few days. To handle the fast switching between components they had to incorporate a relatively new technology: transistors.
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Robert McNees (mcnees@mastodon.social)'s status on Wednesday, 25-Oct-2023 14:57:45 UTC Robert McNees Higinbotham devised the game for a public exhibition at Brookhaven Lab, and built it with Robert Dvorak.
"It might liven up the place to have a game... which would convey the message that our scientific endeavors have relevance for society.”
He apparently got the idea after looking through the manual for the analog computer in his lab (a Donner Model 30). It showed how, when modeling the flight of projectiles, the computer could be hooked up to an oscilloscope to display their trajectories.