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TV Game Unit #8, 1968

American History Museum

Brown Box With Baseball Chassis
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International media Interoperability Framework
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Object Details

patent holder

Baer, Ralph H.

inventor

Baer, Ralph H.

Description

What do you do after you invent the video game? Try to make it better!
While preparing their video game system prototype, the “Brown Box” to be presented to potential investors, Ralph Baer and his colleague Bill Harrison created TV Game Unit #8. They wanted to demonstrate a more advanced technology that would allow the user’s paddle to determine, in the direction and speed of the game ball, when the two would collide. This would allow for games such as baseball and more realistic hockey game play.
This TV Game Unit #8 interfaced with the "Brown Box," but proved too expensive to pursue in these early stages. Since it was not going to be shown to investors just yet, it was never covered with brown wood grain self-adhesive vinyl to match the "Brown Box." A few years later, this technology was key when Baer and his colleagues started to design and build arcade games.

Location

Currently not on view

Credit Line

Ralph H. Baer

Date made

1968

ID Number

2006.0102.07

catalog number

2006.0102.07

accession number

2006.0102

Object Name

game chassis

Physical Description

aluminum (overall material)

Measurements

overall: 3 1/4 in x 12 1/4 in x 10 1/4 in; 8.255 cm x 31.115 cm x 26.035 cm

Related Publication

Baer, Ralph H.. Videogames: In The Beginning

See more items in

Medicine and Science: Computers
Popular Entertainment
Baer
Family & Social Life
Computers & Business Machines

Data Source

National Museum of American History

Metadata Usage

CC0

Link to Original Record

https://n2t.net/ark:/65665/ng49ca746ab-f0a8-704b-e053-15f76fa0b4fa

Record ID

nmah_1302003

Discover More

Dark brown wood-grain box. Two smaller boxes with knobs sit wired to the left and right of it.

The Father of the Video Game: The Ralph Baer Prototypes and Electronic Games

Dark brown wood-grain box. Two smaller boxes with knobs sit wired to the left and right of it.

The Father of the Video Game: The Ralph Baer Prototypes and Electronic Games

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Playtime: Toys, Games, and Puzzles

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1968: A Year in the Collections

Dark brown wood-grain box. Two smaller boxes with knobs sit wired to the left and right of it.

Video Game History

Dark brown wood-grain box. Two smaller boxes with knobs sit wired to the left and right of it.

Biography

1968: Snapshots

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