Martin,
Thanks for sharing this information. I can't attend -
I live in Boston and I'm quite a tight budget - but I
think there's a way we can help each other.
I'm a reporter at eWeek (the ZD magazine formerly
called PC Week), and seperately, I'm writing a book
about the history of handheld computing. The slant
is, what can the history teach us about the future?
Obviously handheld electronic games count as handheld
computers. I'm well aware of the mainstream products,
like the mid-1970s Mattel games (spent many hours with
my football game as a child!), Gameboy/Lynx, etc. I
bought a copy of the book Supercade, but to my
disappointment it didn't focus much on handhelds.
In your opinion, what was the FIRST electronic
handheld game? What was the first to give users the
choice of many games in one? First to actual have
graphics? Color graphics? Did any systems have other
more computer-like software?
I'm interested in discussing this at length. If
you're still online though, perhaps we could chat now,
just to say hello and introduce ourselves: I always
enjoy meeting others who are into this stuff.
Thanks,
Evan Koblentz (617.461.7194)
--- Martin Scott Goldberg <wgungfu(a)csd.uwm.edu> wrote:
Hope this is appropriate for here. I'm a vintage
computer collector (as
well as video game consoles and such), and
co-organizer of the Midwest
Classic (
www.midwestclassic.net). We have three
main areas (vintage
video game consoles, vintage computers, and
pinball).
I'd like to build up the participation (displays,
attendance, etc.) of
people from the vintage computer scene. Beyond the
8 bit micro's that are
already on display (my collection at last year's
event can be seen here -
http://www.goatstore.com/mwcp_mus.htm), I'd love to
get some mini's there
as well as more informative (and fun) displays, and
anything else people
would be willing to set up.
The show itself is non-profit (though if you
yourselves have equipment,
software, etc. you want to sell, that's wonderful),
and is on Saturday
June 7th from 10am to 8pm. The location is:
Nicolet High School
6701 North Jean Nicolet Road
Glendale, Wisconsin 53217
For those not familiar, Glendale is a suburb on the
north side of
Milwaukee.
Feel free to contact me if you're intersted!
Marty
wgungfu(a)uwm.edu
ClassicGaming.Com
Atari Gaming Headquarters
www.atarihq.com
Museum of Home Video Gaming
www.classicgaming.com/gamingmuseum