video game console prototypes

Does anyone know what Ralph Baer’s first video games were?
Does anyone know what they were called? Not the Odyssey console games, but his prototypes. Any links would be much appreciated.
Baer started development of the “Brown Box” console video game system and several other prototypes in 1966 for the defense-electronics company Sanders Associates in Nashua, New Hampshire (now part of BAE Systems). In 1971, it was licensed to Magnavox, and after being renamed Magnavox Odyssey, the console was released to the public in 1972. For a time it was Sanders’ most profitable line, though many in the company looked down on game development.
Baer created the first light gun and game for home television use, sold grouped with a game expansion pack for the Odyssey, and collectively known as the Shooting Gallery.[7] The light gun itself was the first peripheral for a video game console.
Another invention is Simon, an electronic pattern-matching game that was immensely popular in the late 1970s and 1980s
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PROTOTYPE $21.20 PS3 Prototype… |
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Prototype Platinum Hits $20.00 You are Alex Mercer. You are the Prototype… a shape shifter with amazing powers of combat, destruction, and deception. Consume targets for their form and memories to assume a perfect disguise, or instantly transform your body into an array of deadly biological weapons, cutting your way to the heart of the conspiracy forty years in the making. Stalk the streets of New York City, searching for the… |
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PROTOTYPE $28.00 Prototype for Xbox 360…You are the PROTOTYPE Alex Mercer hiding in human form. You step out onto the streets of New York with no memory but limitless power. As a terrifying viral epidemic sweeps across Manhattan top-secret Black Watch Special Forces move in transforming it into a war zone. Delve into the mysteries of your origin the true nature of your power and your part in a conspiracy 40 year… |
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The Black Art Of Video Game Console Design $32.47 Buy and sell [The Black Art Of Video Game Console Design] at great prices. |
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Nintendo 64 System – Video Game Console – Jungle Green $49.99 Nintendo 64 System – Video Game Console – Jungle Green |
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Video Game Jockey – Game Console to PC Monitor Adapter $63.99 The StarTech.com COMP2VGA game console to PC monitor converter is designed to convert composite video and S-Video signals to a full-screen VGA signal. |
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Game Console Hacking $31.05 Most video console game players want to win at all costs, including by discovering "cheats" built into the games–this guide illustrates how to configure and modify the actual game console to make it perform above and beyond what the original designers intended. Original. (Advanced) |
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Microsoft Xbox – Video Game Console $49.35 XBOX VideoSystem we offered in this listing has problem. We will list about half a dozen of systems. We do not do any repairs. We sell pawn collateral. We test the item once and not spend more than 2-3-4 minutes. If any problems noted we immediately take them out of sale without any attempts to repair.You have to know how to fix the console if you buy it. Wires are not included.ulliOriginal Xbox Console by Microsoft/ul |
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Console Role-Playing Game $65.21 High Quality Content by WIKIPEDIA articles! A console role-playing game is a video game genre that has its origin rooted in video game consoles and includes game mechanics and, frequently, settings derived from those of traditional role-playing games. The term also applies to role-playing video games on handheld video game systems, such as the Nintendo DS and PSP. |
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Game Console Security $74.87 The new game consoles and handheld machines available on the market today are designed with Internet and multiplayer connectivity in mind, and they are also designed to be connected to the Internet 24 hours a day. This combination of computational power and connectivity could make the game consoles lucrative targets for viruses, Trojans, botnets, spam and other malware. Users of home computers are slowly learning that they need to protect their computers through the use of firewalls, antivirus and the like. But most of us do not consider a game console to be a computer, and therefore do not consider protecting it the same way we protect a normal computer. The goal of this book is to find out if new vulnerabilities are introduced into the home when connecting a gaming console to the Internet. We also take a look at children’s use of computer and video games, and what the parents know about it. This book can be helpful to game console enthusiast, security professionals, game console designers and parents, in an effort to determine how secure it is to use a game console online. |
