

Atari Founder Debuts Linux-Based Game Machines 98
jalefkowit writes "Wired News has a great story about uWink, Nolan Bushnell's new game company. Bushnell is the creator of "Pong" and the man who was behind the early successes of Atari, including the 2600 console and its pioneering stand-up arcade machines. Now he's launched a line of new stand-up, net-connected game machines that are powered by Linux."
Bad HTML (Score:1)
They have a bad case of the bad HTML [w3.org].
Why is it so hard to write valid HTML?
Re:Source Please? (Score:1)
All the parts needed to use the Net and ... (Score:1)
I mean, c'mon, if the list of games created is what they show, this is so last century as to be a total waste of time.
Maybe they're counting on you being so blotto from the beer that you'd actually play one of these games
Nolan Bushnell didn't invent Pong (Score:5)
Nolan Bushnell does deserve much credit for laboring long and hard to put Spacewar (Computer Space) on smaller cheaper hardware and inventing the first electronic arcade game. And he deserves credit for successfully marketing Pong as an arcade and home game. But he did not invent Pong
Re:Source Please? (Score:1)
are you fucking drunk? (Score:1)
Suck... (Score:1)
They look like slightly glorified version of the Mastertouch 5000 or whatever that stupid thing is sitting in the corner of some bars.
I'm not impressed. I'd much rather play Space Rocks [wildtangent.com] from WildTangent [wildtangent.com] in WinAmp [winamp.com].
Damn
Refrag
Coin-OP Video Game Revolution (Score:1)
Back when I was a kid I fought and stole for quarters to play coin-op games like Pac-Man, Dig-Dug, Two Tigers, Heavy Barrel, etc. These were games that you could learn to play for a long time after a reasonable investment. Something that would bring you back for more. It was battle against the machine, not against another person.
Virtual sport, etc, games provide somewhat of the same challenge, unfortunately usually the designers expend their efforts working on better hardware skateboards, skis, or rifles, resulting in gameplay that pales in comparison to the $1/play pricing system.
I can only hope that these systems OR SOMETHING ELSE bring back the joy that you could have by playing for a little while, learning something, playing again, and then playing better. All at low cost, and as basically just a "fun" experience and not one with grand theatrics.
Re:Nolan's last company (Score:3)
He also founded Chuck E. Cheese.
Re:Source Please? (Score:2)
And they're not necessarily even running a non-"standard" (whatever that would be) kernel. They may be using ONLY the kernel.
But go ahead and be a gadfly. That's the sort of thing that keeps companies honest. It should cost them next to nothing to say "Yes, we're not violating the GPL, and to prove it, here's the process you can go through to produce the GPL binaries on our system - include these options, exclude those, and use this compiler."
Re:Source Please? (Score:2)
- Lease the box for your "operating system" for 100 years at whatever price you would have sold it at. Make it so you need the box to use the O/S.
- Modify any GPL software however you like to make it work whatever (improved) way you want.
- When they ask for the sources, simply tell the people they don't own the "operating system", and are only leasing the box and therefore have no rights to its source.
Now we know how Microsoft Linux is going to happen.
Re:Multiplayer arcade games (Score:1)
Also there is a Net Mame version that will allow you to play multiplayer.
As for Credit Cards, hell ya, at 2 bux a play for some of these new games, you need a big bag of quarters...
Re:Bad HTML (Score:2)
May soon be the Kramnik of DOT (Score:2)
Oh, was that offtopic?
The "great man" theory strikes again. (Score:2)
I really object to this generalization. If you do some research, I think you'll find Bushnell did not program all the early Atari arcade machines (or 2600 games) by hismelf nor de he build all of them by hand in his garage,
This kind of over generalization really minimalizes all the hard work and genius of the OTHERS who worked on these projects. (A few of whom it has been my pleasure to know later in their careers.)
Re:Multiplayer arcade games (Score:1)
What would really get me to fork out more than fifty cents a play (but no more than a buck, please) for networked games would to be to have a bank of, say, four systems next to one another, connected to three other banks of four. Racing games, tank games, whatever. You work in teams, able to shout at one another over the din of explosions and racing engines, and you do your work.
Incidentally, this sort of thing is the best way to get things done playing networked team games on the PC; Some of us in my office will play Unreal Tournament while sitting in the same room, and we'll do better than average, because we can communicate freely. Of course, there's always teleconferencing, which would work pretty good, too, but this way you can hear your friends and the speaker sounds both very well. Otherwise you'd need some sort of attenuation and mixing system so that you could pipe the phone signal into your headphones along with the game sound.
Being able to play in arcades in that way would be very excellent. I can't get too excited about playing tetris with someone in Manhattan, though. At least, not for more than a quarter.
Re:shortsighted (Score:1)
Re:What games? (Score:1)
Re:That's IT? (Score:1)
A couple responses (Score:1)
Re:Nolan Bushnell didn't invent Pong (Score:1)
But slashdot CENSORED me!
Or rather they restriced me
It really agitates me to know there are Americans out there spewing fourth vacuous dribble from their tiny little minds and they have no idea why they are allowed to do this. Not that you, Anonymous Coward, have a tiny little mind. You are allowed, if you are not from the USA. But I know there are Americans out there that don't have a clue about the first amendment and that just pisses me off!
Maybey I should just erase my sig, and enter this manually.
Re:Nolan Bushnell didn't invent Pong (Score:1)
Ralph Bear patented Television Gaming Apparatus and Method [delphion.com]". Basically all videogames had to be licensed from Sanders Associates, Inc (Mr. Baer's company). The fact that this was allowed can be chalked up to ignorance. No one person or group should be blamed, there was enough ignorance to go around. While everyone could understand saucer shaped crafts that fly, this was not the case with videogames. No one, not even Mr, Bear himself, had a clue how prevalent videogames would become and no one else knew what they were.
As I understand it, the court case involving pong (just one of the things I mentioned) was not so much about any specific games (Hockey vs Pong) but rather Mr. Baer's 'videogame patent' was being defended. The similarity between hockey and pong was just a damaging bit of evidence against Mr. Bushnell and supported the claim that he deliberately stole the idea as opposed to the claim that any resemblance between Magnavox's product and Atari's was purely coincidental. I do admit I have not read the entire court transcripts from beginning to end but I'm pretty sure I got the important details right.
I'm not bitching that PONG was second hand, just stating the facts. Willy Higinbotham invented it, Ralph Bear patented it, Nolan Bushnell successfully marketed it. Magnavox took Atari to court, where the name Willy Higinbotham was never mentioned. Nolan Bushnell technically lost, but managed a slick licensing deal out of the mess. Videogames began their rise to total entertainment domination. That leads to the present, where many people continue to think Nolan Bushnell invented videogames and don't hesitate to pass on this false rumor, often in credible forums.
Re:Nolan's last company (Score:2)
Of course, there's a Centipede machine at another coffee shop I know of that is never idle either.
I hope someday to see a MAME cabinet/cocktail at a coffeeshop so I could play alllll day long from a selection of 400+ games.
Buy one first (Score:4)
Re:Source Please? (Score:2)
Good point. If however, I was a kiosk owner, and I purchased a console, then I would be recieving the binaries (and the device) and I could then ask for the source, and distribute it freely myself.
Volunteers?
Um, Yes, Linux Offers Some Things... (Score:2)
That's IT? (Score:1)
Why not simply put something together using the GLQuake engine? It's GPL, and I'm sure id wouldn't mind selling them a license. You could have something closer to the original vision of Quake - a networked system of worlds leading off into games through portals.
Re:NTN Trivia? (Score:2)
Re:What games? (Score:2)
Windows Devices (OT) (Score:3)
"Are these registers running Windows?" I asked incredulously when I got to the head of the line.
"Yes," she answered, "that's why they go down so often."
Re:Bad HTML (Score:1)
Well, slashdot won't let me post the link. It keeps inserting spaces. Anyway, just plug http://www.uwink.com/netscape/4_5/i nde x.html [uwink.com] into http://validator.w3.org [w3.org]
Re:shortsighted (Score:2)
I could've sworn I selected "Plain Old Text"... nt (Score:1)
Also founded Chuck E Cheese (Score:2)
Inside Your Bar Owners Head (Score:3)
Re:What games? (Score:1)
Yeah... right... (Score:1)
Oh yeah, let me help with that genius project.
--
"Don't trolls get tired?"
Re:some games that their working on... (Score:1)
Yeah, just like the tabletop games that are in bars all over the world now, which rake in money from drunk people.
Personally I think they should include a breathalyzer. Those things are great fun. Every now and then we drink our asses off to see if we can blow a 0.4 on the drunkometer. If you want to make cash on coins, put a breathalyzer machine in your bar.
Pfft, NTP? (Score:1)
--
Re:Nolan's last company (Score:1)
Nolan founded Chuck E. Cheese but somehow I don't think that's the company you are referring to.
Maru
Re:Also founded Chuck E Cheese (Score:2)
There is a really cool book titled "The Rise and Fall of Atari" that explains exactly why Atari went down the shitter. Of course, Nolan was well out of there by that point.
Maru
Re:Multiplayer arcade games (Score:2)
When 'fat pipe' higher bandwidth connections begin to be standard in home networking, then it's more likely to be usuable.
Having said all this, having an ADSL connection on an arcade machine surely isn't infeasible; arcade machines are pretty pricy on their own, and an ADSL connection would be peanuts compared to the purchase price.
Haiku (Score:1)
Now we know how it begins
Soon we will be Borg
Re:Multiplayer arcade games (Score:1)
2 AUD per game is typical for most up-to-the-minute games - for something *really* special you can occasionally pay 3 AUD. Of course with the Pacific Peso the way it is at the moment that's less than a pound anyway . . .
i always wanted to play.. (Score:1)
Yippie!
:)
-- Thrakkerzog
What games? (Score:1)
I hope it's better than Gnobots or XTris.
Makes sense... (Score:3)
I think this was just a matter of time... (Score:1)
Capt. Ron
Quake? (Score:1)
Pong 2K; What a revolution! (Score:2)
"Evil beware: I'm armed to the teeth and packing a hampster!"
NTN (Score:3)
Awesome :) (Score:1)
Re:i always wanted to play.. (Score:1)
Re:Quake? (Score:1)
There was a Quake Arcade [flashnet.it] machine, if you care.
--
Re:What is up with these boneheads? (Score:1)
Either way, I would easily pay a quarter to play some of the classic games against someone else. It would really fit in with the college crowd. We grew up with these games. After high school, most of us went in different directions. Something like this would let us play our favorite classic games against each other from across the world.
How much does an ordinary arcade game cost?
-- Thrakkerzog
Re:Quake? (Score:1)
I predict... (Score:1)
The immanent demise of arcades -or- a rebirth (Score:2)
This is good to see (Score:1)
-- Put too much time into classics. Yes, classics are awesome, like Space Invaders, but really, it's nothing new
-- Have too much "exclusive" games done in-house. Remember Jaguar, anyone?
-- More importantly, get some new titles, etc, that going to rule :)
I love the fact that this will be based on the Linux kernel (read: XBox will cost a fortune just in the fact of making the NT kernel work. Royalty? Would M$ really charge themselves one? :P) and also with modems to connect. Seriously, though, it should have ethernet as well... hopefully he'll wise up and allow connections to any ISP :)
These can be useful for retrofitting... (Score:2)
I'm thinking, more or less, about videophones... but I'm sure there are a lot more useful ideas that will come about with more flexible kiosks.
Re:Bushnell may have created 'pong' (Score:2)
On 29th May 1972, Nolan Bushnell (later President of Atari) visits the "Magnavox Profit Caravan" at the Airport Marina Hotel in Burlingame, CA. He signs the guest book for Magnavox Odyssey Demo and plays the Odyssey Ping-Pong game hands-on. Later, he hires Alan Alcorn to design and build a coin-op version of the Ping-Pong game: PONG. This will mark the begining of the coin-op market.
I was about to chime in with that, but I read before doing so. Mr. Baer is a family friend, and I have spent many an amazing trips down gaming memory lane in his basement. Talking GI-Joe? Simon? Those are only a few of his masterpieces...
cool! (Score:2)
Re:Multiplayer arcade games (Score:2)
Hm.
The most I'd ever put into an arcade machine is a pound a game, and only if it were a really good game (multiplayer, and/or with some sort of gimmick like Silent Scope's zoomed sniper scope rifle).
And this is London prices, so everything's about double what you'll pay in the rest of England.
Bushnell sold out in '76 (Score:2)
Re:Bad HTML (Score:2)
That's interesting (Score:2)
Fine, Have it your way (Score:2)
I don't care in the slightest what proportion of that time involved:
The point is that it took ten minutes from the time of pressing the power switch before the cashier was able to Enter My Order, which is, after all, the whole point of having the computer there.
And, as for the "journalling" issue, I have gotten myself a journalling filesystem, at least as far as metadata goes. I've been using ReiserFS [devlinux.com] for probably the last 18 months, thank you very much...
Re:Also founded Chuck E Cheese (Score:2)
Re:Inside Your Bar Owners Head (Score:1)
Re:Bushnell may have created 'pong' (Score:1)
http://www.pong-story.com/thefirst.htm
BTW, it sounds like Mr. Baer is quite bitter about this. At the same web site, he is quoted:
His demo used an oscilloscope as a display and an analog computer to move the CRT spot around. To qualify as a video game, you have to have to pass one major test: Can you play the game on a standard home TV set or a TV monitor?
Of *course* Higginbotham's pong qualifies as a video game. It was interactive. It was entertainment. It included a display. What does TV or a monitor have to do with it? A gameboy doesn't use a "standard home tv set or monitor", and it certainly plays video games. And in 50 years, when games pipe images straight into our optic nerves, they'll still qualify as video games too.
Baer's other argument that is that it's not a real game because it wasn't a commercial venture. I guess all us open source guys aren't real programmers either, eh?
Re:Fine, Have it your way (Score:2)
How Sears configures their systems is none of my business.
Had I done anything more profound than telling the cashier to "just press enter" at the right moment, I might quite legitimately have been considered to be trespassing on Sears' information systems; whatever is slow is their problem. You feel free to walk into a Sears store and start hacking on their systems.
If security comes to take you away, then be happy; you tuned their application boot-up time by five minutes, and can now Go to Jail. Do Not Pass Go. Do Not Collect $200.
Enjoy.
Re:Multiplayer arcade games (Score:1)
Actually, for multiple machines you'd be best off with something like a SDSL connection. ADSL is bad because when you are receiving at half speed, you can only send at half speed. You also can't do both at once, of course. SDSL doesn't have that limitation. SDSL ranges from being the same price as ADSL, to about five times the cost, but if people fork out $2 per game, that pays for itself fairly quickly, which is a reasonable scenario in some places (Like Vegas.)
For a single machine though, ADSL is plenty.
Re:NTN (Score:1)
Oh man, TGI Friday's has those at their bar and I did get addicted to NTN and those bowl-sized margaritas Friday's has. The poster who said that the questions get harder as the night goes on is right!
Maru
Wary of Atari (Score:1)
Re:Windows Devices (OT) (Score:1)
hmmmm... my POS's take about 5min to reboot, they boot into bios, then run scandisk, load keyboard drivers, reboot into bios then start windows, lastly startup the pos software...
luckly they are mostly stable... but my powerplug is much too easy for custumers to trip on.
nmarshall
The law is that which it boldly asserted and plausibly maintained..
NTN Trivia? (Score:1)
Now I realize that they are talking about games like pong, but does anyone really think there's a market for these? Sure, it might be fun once to play PONG versus somebody in another state in a bar, but I really don't see these machines as *game* machines going anyhwere.
just my thoughts.
Nolan's last company (Score:5)
The machines had some networking support, so they could download new trivia questions and software updates and high scores and things. So, every gamebox shipped with Windows NT on it. They had a custom touch screen driver so you could tap on the screen to push buttons.
As I heard it, everything was going okay, until they got hit by two things. First Microsoft announced some kind of Microsoft based coin-op box. I don't know what ever happened to this. But, it was big competition. Now, the venture capital was a little harder to find.
The second problem they had was that the game machines were all working fine -- that is until Daylight savings time changed. On that day every machine out in the field popped up a dialog box from some driver in Windows NT. Which for some weird reason crashed the machines, and they were no longer able to talk to the central servers. They had to ship out new hard drives to every one they had sold. Ooops.
Maybe they'll have better luck with Linux.
Multiplayer arcade games (Score:4)
Adding more players over a network could make it even better... if done well.
The logistics are difficult though. On lots of multiplayer games on a PC you end up spending most of your time in the 'lobby' area waiting for a game, or searching for one that you can connect to with reasonable latency. Coin-ops need a quicker, more reliable process of game selection; put your coin in, and play, without any fuss.
As for the credit card aspect of it, well, I don't know. There's something to be said for just putting a coin in, having a quick fun game, and leaving.
Re:What games? (Score:1)
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Re:NTN (Score:1)
-- Thrakkerzog
shortsighted (Score:3)
From the wired story [wired.com] (emphasis mine):
This seems incredibly short-sighted to me.
To go to all the trouble of creating and marketing these boxes, getting them into the venues, and connecting them without broadband is just silly. Especially since they accuse the industry of remaining in the dark ages....
Appropriate at a boring bar (Score:1)
Where are the 3D action games????
some games that their working on... (Score:2)
actually, they look childish, and simplistic. they are all fairly non-complex games. most of them look like variants of memory or tic-tac-toe.
ugh.
tagline
Sears + Windows NT (Score:2)
Unfortunately, the day I was there, the system got confused, and was sitting stuck in the BIOS configuration screen. Had I not told the cashier to "Just press enter when it says to," she was cruising for getting really frustrated watching it cycle through the "Post" routine.
At least there was a regular keyboard...
Wait, there's more: "Computer Space" (Score:2)
Re:I predict... (Score:2)
Re:Windows Devices (OT) (Score:1)
Did anyone who actually followed the link... (Score:1)
Re:Windows Devices (OT) (Score:1)
The funniest thing I've seen this week was a President's Choice banking machine in a grocery store, proudly displaying a BSOD to all passersby.
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Where can the word be found, where can the word resound? Not here, there is not enough silence.
Re:Quake? (Score:1)
Burnt into the hardware (Score:1)
It dosn't require you to make the source code available before the product.
It also dosn't mean anything if the source code is burnt into the hardware.. Meaning it's no good for anyone who dosn't buy the machine.
Anyway it dosn't matter.. He dosn't need to GPL his own software (just becouse it runs on Linux).
All that is needed is to provide the changes made to Linux.. Those changes would purely be to make Linux work better on the hardware and of no use to anyone who dosn't have that hardware.
true - I stand corrected (Score:2)
Finally (Score:1)
Re:Bad HTML (Score:2)
Bushnell may have created 'pong' (Score:4)
On 29th May 1972, Nolan Bushnell (later President of Atari) visits the "Magnavox Profit Caravan" at the Airport Marina Hotel in Burlingame, CA. He signs the guest book for Magnavox Odyssey Demo and plays the Odyssey Ping-Pong game hands-on. Later, he hires Alan Alcorn to design and build a coin-op version of the Ping-Pong game: PONG. This will mark the begining of the coin-op market.
Indrema Link? (Score:2)
Source Please? (Score:2)
This statement implies that they have modified the OS. Any direct modifications to linux would fall under the GPL. I searched their site and couldn't find the source.
I just sent them a polite email asking for the source code. I'll keep you posted, but feel free to join me in politely asking where all their GPL'd code is dropped.
Sure would be fun to play with.
Re:I think this was just a matter of time... (Score:1)