Good times! I loved my NES. The first seven notes of the Super Mario Brothers overworld music are permanently burned into my brain. I'm particularly fond of hearing it performed on Tesla coils. -Eric On Mon, Oct 18, 2010 at 12:34 PM, Michael T. Bendorf <<bendo...@a-ccentral.us>bendo...@a-ccentral.us> wrote: <http://www.wired.com/thisdayintech/2010/10/1018nintendo-nes-launches>http://www.wired.com/thisdayintech/2010/10/1018nintendo-nes-launches 1985: Nintendo releases a limited batch of Nintendo Entertainment Systems in New York City, quietly launching the most influential videogame platform of all time. Twenty-five years ago today, the American videogame market was in shambles. Sales of game machines by Atari, Mattel and Coleco had risen to dizzying heights, then collapsed even more quickly. Retailers didn’t want to listen to the little startup Nintendo of America talk about how its Japanese parent company had a huge hit with the Famicom (the 1983 Asian release of what became NES). In America, videogames were dead, dead, dead. Personal computers were the future, and anything that just played games but couldn’t do your taxes was hopelessly backwards... <http://goo.gl/piJv>http://goo.gl/piJv --Michael T. Bendorf-- Technology Administrator A-C Central C.U.S.D. #262 Google Voice: 217.408.0043 "I'm trying to teach myself to ask the same questions that you do during your lectures so that I do not need you any more." A good teacher is like a candle - it consumes itself to light the way for others. "The computer revolution hasn't started yet. Don't be misled by the enormous flow of money into bad defacto standards for unsophisticated buyers using poor adaptations of incomplete ideas." - Alan Kay | Subscription info at<http://www.tech-geeks.org/> http://www.tech-geeks.org | -- Eric Barringer Technology Coordinator Blue Ridge CUSD #18
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