Ted Dabney, a Founder of Atari and a Creator of Pong, Dies at 81

Authored by nytimes.com and submitted by illkwill
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Samuel F. Dabney, an electrical engineer who laid the groundwork for the modern video game industry as a co-founder of Atari and helped create the hit console game Pong, died on May 26 at his home in Clearlake, Calif. He was 81.

The cause was esophageal cancer, his wife, Carolyn Dabney, said.

Mr. Dabney, known as Ted, brought arcade video games to the world with Atari, a start-up that he and a partner, Nolan Bushnell, founded in Sunnyvale, Calif., in the early 1970s.

At a time when computers — the main arena then for programmers working to build games — could cost hundreds of thousands of dollars apiece, Mr. Dabney spurned them altogether. Instead he tinkered in a workshop he had set up in his daughter’s bedroom and used plywood and fake mahogany paneling to build Atari’s first consoles.

Mr. Dabney used cheap television components to create an interactive motion system and, in 1971, the world’s first commercial video game, Computer Space.

Vergs on June 1st, 2018 at 01:49 UTC »

Just saw a web piece on how many married couples met as strangers playing the Pong arcade because it required two players.

What a pure and beautiful thing.

steauengeglase on June 1st, 2018 at 00:45 UTC »

Reading his Wiki article was just sad. The guy got screwed over again and again. Props to Allan Alcorn for giving credit where credit is due.

After leaving Atari, Mr. Dabney continued programming, often for the benefit of his wife. He built a recipe program so that she could search for recipes by ingredient and a bank program that allowed her to balance her checkbook just the way she wanted.

In 1995, the Dabneys opened a grocery store and deli called Mountain Market in the tiny mountain town of Crescent Mills, Calif. The shop had movie rentals, a deli, tackle and bait, and rotisserie chicken.

“They almost always had the wood-burning stove burning, with books and chairs for folks to hang out,” Pamela Dabney said. “It was like home.”

Dawwww

DrLager on May 31st, 2018 at 23:26 UTC »

RIP Ted. I'll always remember sitting in front of my TV at 2 in the morning playing Asteroids. The cricket chirps and the Atari sound were the music of my childhood.