Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Tennis_for_Two> ?p ?o }
- Tennis_for_Two abstract "Tennis For Two is a sports video game developed in 1958 which simulates a game of tennis, and was one of the first games developed in the early history of video games. American physicist William Higinbotham designed the game for display at the Brookhaven National Laboratory's annual public exhibition after learning that the government research institution's Donner Model 30 analog computer could simulate trajectories with wind resistance. He designed the game, displayed on an oscilloscope and played with two custom aluminum controllers, in a few hours, after which he and technician Robert V. Dvorak built it over three weeks. The game's visuals show a representation of a tennis court viewed from the side, and players adjust the angle of their shots with a knob on their controller and try to hit the ball over the net by pressing a button.The game was very popular during the three-day exhibition, with players lining up to see the game, especially high school students. It was shown again the following year with a larger oscilloscope screen and more a complicated design that could simulate different gravity levels. It was then dismantled and largely forgotten until the late 1970s, when Higinbotham testified in court about the game during lawsuits between Magnavox and Ralph H. Baer over video game patents. Since then, it has been celebrated as one of the earliest video games, and Brookhaven has made recreations of the original device. Under some definitions Tennis for Two is considered the first video game, as while it did not include any technological innovations over prior games, it was the first computer game to be created purely as an entertainment product rather than for academic research or commercial technology promotion.".
- Tennis_for_Two computingPlatform Analog_computer.
- Tennis_for_Two computingPlatform Oscilloscope.
- Tennis_for_Two designer William_Higinbotham.
- Tennis_for_Two genre Sports_game.
- Tennis_for_Two releaseDate "1958-10-18".
- Tennis_for_Two thumbnail Tennis_For_Two_on_a_DuMont_Lab_Oscilloscope_Type_304-A.jpg?width=300.
- Tennis_for_Two wikiPageExternalLink tennisfortwo.
- Tennis_for_Two wikiPageExternalLink tennis1958.htm.
- Tennis_for_Two wikiPageID "921415".
- Tennis_for_Two wikiPageLength "18442".
- Tennis_for_Two wikiPageOutDegree "54".
- Tennis_for_Two wikiPageRevisionID "705585874".
- Tennis_for_Two wikiPageWikiLink Analog_computer.
- Tennis_for_Two wikiPageWikiLink Bertie_the_Brain.
- Tennis_for_Two wikiPageWikiLink Brookhaven_National_Laboratory.
- Tennis_for_Two wikiPageWikiLink Category:1958_video_games.
- Tennis_for_Two wikiPageWikiLink Category:History_of_video_games.
- Tennis_for_Two wikiPageWikiLink Category:Tennis_video_games.
- Tennis_for_Two wikiPageWikiLink Cathode-ray_tube_amusement_device.
- Tennis_for_Two wikiPageWikiLink Christopher_Strachey.
- Tennis_for_Two wikiPageWikiLink Cornell_University.
- Tennis_for_Two wikiPageWikiLink Creative_Computing.
- Tennis_for_Two wikiPageWikiLink David_H._Ahl.
- Tennis_for_Two wikiPageWikiLink Drag_(physics).
- Tennis_for_Two wikiPageWikiLink Draughts.
- Tennis_for_Two wikiPageWikiLink Early_history_of_video_games.
- Tennis_for_Two wikiPageWikiLink Electronic_game.
- Tennis_for_Two wikiPageWikiLink Interactivity.
- Tennis_for_Two wikiPageWikiLink Magnavox.
- Tennis_for_Two wikiPageWikiLink Manhattan_Project.
- Tennis_for_Two wikiPageWikiLink Multiplayer_video_game.
- Tennis_for_Two wikiPageWikiLink Nuclear_proliferation.
- Tennis_for_Two wikiPageWikiLink OXO.
- Tennis_for_Two wikiPageWikiLink Operations_Research_Office.
- Tennis_for_Two wikiPageWikiLink Oscilloscope.
- Tennis_for_Two wikiPageWikiLink Prior_art.
- Tennis_for_Two wikiPageWikiLink Ralph_H._Baer.
- Tennis_for_Two wikiPageWikiLink Relay.
- Tennis_for_Two wikiPageWikiLink Sports_game.
- Tennis_for_Two wikiPageWikiLink Stony_Brook_University.
- Tennis_for_Two wikiPageWikiLink Tennis.
- Tennis_for_Two wikiPageWikiLink Transistor.
- Tennis_for_Two wikiPageWikiLink Upton,_New_York.
- Tennis_for_Two wikiPageWikiLink Vacuum_tube.
- Tennis_for_Two wikiPageWikiLink Video_game.
- Tennis_for_Two wikiPageWikiLink Video_game_graphics.
- Tennis_for_Two wikiPageWikiLink William_Higinbotham.
- Tennis_for_Two wikiPageWikiLink Williams_College.
- Tennis_for_Two wikiPageWikiLink File:Tennis_For_Two_in_1959.jpg.
- Tennis_for_Two wikiPageWikiLink File:Tennis_For_Two_re-created_in_1997.png.
- Tennis_for_Two wikiPageWikiLink File:Tennis_for_Two_-_Modern_recreation.jpg.
- Tennis_for_Two wikiPageWikiLink File:William_Higinbotham.jpg.
- Tennis_for_Two wikiPageWikiLinkText "First Video Game".
- Tennis_for_Two wikiPageWikiLinkText "Tennis for Two".
- Tennis_for_Two designer William_Higinbotham.
- Tennis_for_Two genre Sports_game.
- Tennis_for_Two modes Multiplayer_video_game.
- Tennis_for_Two platforms Analog_computer.
- Tennis_for_Two platforms Oscilloscope.
- Tennis_for_Two released "1958-10-18".
- Tennis_for_Two title "Tennis For Two".
- Tennis_for_Two wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Clear.
- Tennis_for_Two wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Commonscat.
- Tennis_for_Two wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Early_history_of_video_games.
- Tennis_for_Two wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Good_article.
- Tennis_for_Two wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Infobox_video_game.
- Tennis_for_Two wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Tennis_for_Two subject Category:1958_video_games.
- Tennis_for_Two subject Category:History_of_video_games.
- Tennis_for_Two subject Category:Tennis_video_games.
- Tennis_for_Two hypernym Game.
- Tennis_for_Two type Software.
- Tennis_for_Two type VideoGame.
- Tennis_for_Two type Work.
- Tennis_for_Two type Redirect.
- Tennis_for_Two type Work.
- Tennis_for_Two type CreativeWork.
- Tennis_for_Two type Thing.
- Tennis_for_Two type Q386724.
- Tennis_for_Two type Q7397.
- Tennis_for_Two type Q7889.
- Tennis_for_Two comment "Tennis For Two is a sports video game developed in 1958 which simulates a game of tennis, and was one of the first games developed in the early history of video games. American physicist William Higinbotham designed the game for display at the Brookhaven National Laboratory's annual public exhibition after learning that the government research institution's Donner Model 30 analog computer could simulate trajectories with wind resistance.".
- Tennis_for_Two label "Tennis for Two".
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- Tennis_for_Two sameAs 테니스_포_투.
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- Tennis_for_Two sameAs Tennis_for_Two.