American Decades
Higginbotham, Willy ?-?
INVENTOR OF FIRST VIDEO GAME
Background.
Willy Higginbotham was a physicist. During World War II he joined the Massachusetts Institute of Technology Radiation Laboratory to work on radar display. He contributed to research on the atomic bomb at Los Alamos, New Mexico, and helped develop a radar system associated with the B-29 bomber. After the war, Higginbotham worked for the U.S. government at Brookhaven National Laboratory, where every year there was an open house. People could come in and tour the nuclear research lab and see the equipment used and displays of work in progress. Higginbotham feared that visitors to the open house were bored.
A Visitors' Game.
As director of the instrumentation division of the lab, he decided to make something interesting for the public in 1958. He took spare parts from an oscilloscope and some other equipment around the lab, hooked it together, and created a game for his...
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1950's Science and Technology
- Overview
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Topics in the News
- Chromosome Number in Humans
- Communication
- The Computer Comes of Age
- Computer Predicts Election
- Computer Technology: Evolving Science
- Cyclotron/Bevatron
- DNA
- Dental Drills: High Speed and Painless (More or Less)
- Fossil Dating
- H-Bomb
- ICBM
- Jets
- Mapping the Ocean Floor
- Maser/Laser
- The Microwave Oven
- The New Frontier
- Nuclear Submarines
- Oral Contraceptives
- Radio Astronomy
- Radioimmunoassay
- The Saint Lawrence Seaway
- Sex Change
- Telephones in the Age of Technology
- Television
- Transatlantic Cable
- The Transistor
- Women in Science and Technology
- Headline Makers
- People in the News
- Awards
- Deaths
- Publications
- Important Events in Science and Technology, 1950–1959
