Article 6EFZ5 Seeing this Pong chip has me finding excuses to visit Rochester’s Strong Museum

Seeing this Pong chip has me finding excuses to visit Rochester’s Strong Museum

by
Kevin Purdy
from Ars Technica - All content on (#6EFZ5)
High-Score-World-Video-Game-Hall-of-Fame

Enlarge / Look around this image and you'll know fairly quickly whether a Strong Museum visit is worth your time or not. (credit: Strong Museum of Play)

Most of my friends in upstate New York, when trying to entice me into a return visit, send pictures of chicken wings, summer days at human-tolerable temperatures, or houses that don't cost more than their parents might have made in their lifetimes.

Recently, however, a friend sent a picture that had me idly checking my vacation balance for the fall: a framed prototype chip for the home version of Pong. It was given as a gift to original programmer Al Alcorn, and it now lives at the Strong Museum of Play in Rochester.

pong_chip.jpg

(credit: Steve Poland / Strong Museum of Play)

Alcorn, who made the game that would establish video games as a training exercise, fought terrifically with Atari founder Nolan Bushnell over the at-home version ofPong and the custom chip required to make it work on TV-ready hardware. After the home version hit Sears in time for the 1975 US holiday season, the chip was given to Alcorn as a gift. And now I must be in its presence.

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