Top Banner
Ryan McClenon Burnett 6th
15

Ryan McClenon Burnett 6th. Edward U. Condon in 1940 designed a computer game called Nim, in which players avoided picking up the last matchstick. Although.

Jan 15, 2016

Download

Documents

Curtis Wheeler
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Ryan McClenon Burnett 6th.  Edward U. Condon in 1940 designed a computer game called Nim, in which players avoided picking up the last matchstick. Although.

Ryan McClenonBurnett6th

Page 2: Ryan McClenon Burnett 6th.  Edward U. Condon in 1940 designed a computer game called Nim, in which players avoided picking up the last matchstick. Although.

Edward U. Condon in 1940 designed a computer game called Nim, in which players avoided picking up the last matchstick. Although the computer won 90% of the time.

Page 3: Ryan McClenon Burnett 6th.  Edward U. Condon in 1940 designed a computer game called Nim, in which players avoided picking up the last matchstick. Although.

Thomas Goldsmith as well as Estle Mann Created the first “FPS” as they attached a cathode ray tube hooked to an oscilloscope display, challenging players to fire a gun at a target.

Page 4: Ryan McClenon Burnett 6th.  Edward U. Condon in 1940 designed a computer game called Nim, in which players avoided picking up the last matchstick. Although.

In 1950 Claude Shannon created a basic program in which players could play a casual game of chess.

Page 5: Ryan McClenon Burnett 6th.  Edward U. Condon in 1940 designed a computer game called Nim, in which players avoided picking up the last matchstick. Although.

In 1955 The U.S Military invented a game in which the Red and Blue team wage war against eachother.

Page 6: Ryan McClenon Burnett 6th.  Edward U. Condon in 1940 designed a computer game called Nim, in which players avoided picking up the last matchstick. Although.

John Burgeson Created a baseball simulation game that ran on a 1620 IBM computer.

Page 7: Ryan McClenon Burnett 6th.  Edward U. Condon in 1940 designed a computer game called Nim, in which players avoided picking up the last matchstick. Although.

After Dartmouth defeated Princeton 28-14, a computer programmer created the first football game.

Page 8: Ryan McClenon Burnett 6th.  Edward U. Condon in 1940 designed a computer game called Nim, in which players avoided picking up the last matchstick. Although.

In 1970 an American Scientist created a game in which overcrowded cells would die while others reproduced. Beautiful patterns would soon to emerge on the screen.

Page 9: Ryan McClenon Burnett 6th.  Edward U. Condon in 1940 designed a computer game called Nim, in which players avoided picking up the last matchstick. Although.

Atari introduced one of the first console games named “Pong”.

Page 10: Ryan McClenon Burnett 6th.  Edward U. Condon in 1940 designed a computer game called Nim, in which players avoided picking up the last matchstick. Although.

A missing slice of pizza inspired Toru Iwatani to create Pac Man, Later to become one of the best selling games of all time.

Page 11: Ryan McClenon Burnett 6th.  Edward U. Condon in 1940 designed a computer game called Nim, in which players avoided picking up the last matchstick. Although.

In 1985 the NES was released, soon reviving the video game industry.

Page 12: Ryan McClenon Burnett 6th.  Edward U. Condon in 1940 designed a computer game called Nim, in which players avoided picking up the last matchstick. Although.

Microsoft 3.0 came with a game Solitare installed into it which allowed users to play a classic card game at home on a computer

Page 13: Ryan McClenon Burnett 6th.  Edward U. Condon in 1940 designed a computer game called Nim, in which players avoided picking up the last matchstick. Although.

Sony released The Play station which was sold for 100$ less than the Sega Saturn.

Page 14: Ryan McClenon Burnett 6th.  Edward U. Condon in 1940 designed a computer game called Nim, in which players avoided picking up the last matchstick. Although.

Was created to be a simple simulation game but later became the best selling computer game of all time and the most popular among female players.

Page 15: Ryan McClenon Burnett 6th.  Edward U. Condon in 1940 designed a computer game called Nim, in which players avoided picking up the last matchstick. Although.

Microsoft's Xbox 360 brings high-definition realism to the game market, as well as even better multiplayer competitions on Xbox Live.