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Tuesday 9 December 2014

Ralph Baer-Creator of world's first video game console dies at 92

President George W. Bush (right) presents the National Medal of Technology to Ralph Baer in 2006.
 The German-born engineer showed off the home console's first game in a 1969 video. His prototype could handle two opponents playing pingpong on a small television set. 
  • Ralph Baer shows the pingpong video game he designed at his Manchester, N.H., home in 2005. 
Five years after the system's release, the Associated Press described Baer's work as responsible for keeping "millions of otherwise rational Americans staying up late."
Baer's started his career as a radio technician after escaping Nazi Germany with his Jewish family in 1938. He then served in the U.S. Army during World War II.
Unlike the rest of his troop, Baer apparently missed the mission to Normandy after falling sick with pneumonia and being hospitalized, his close friend Leonard Herman told the Daily News.
"The man was just incredible. He had such an innocent youth to him. It was like you were with a big kid," Herman said.
His invention paved the way for a multi-billion dollar video game industry, but modern games weren't for him.
"He was amazed by what they could do, but he didn't play them," Herman added.
Baer continued to engineer toys and games long after Odyssey, one of his most well-known products being Simon, a popular memory game in the 1990s.
In 2006, President George W. Bush honored Baer with a National Medal of Technology for his game development.
Baer is survived by three children and four grandchildren.

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