Click Here to visit our Sponsor
The History of Computing The Magazine Have Fun there ! Buy goodies to support us
  Mistake ? You have mr info ? Click here !Add Info     Search     Click here use the advanced search engine
Browse console museumBrowse pong museum









 

ZX81 T-shirts!

see details
Ready prompt T-shirts!

see details
ZX Spectrum T-shirts!

see details
Atari joystick T-shirts!

see details
Spiral program T-shirts!

see details
Arcade cherry T-shirts!

see details
Battle Zone T-shirts!

see details
Vectrex ship T-shirts!

see details
Competition Pro Joystick T-shirts!

see details
Atari ST bombs T-shirts!

see details
C64 maze generator T-shirts!

see details
Moon Lander T-shirts!

see details
Elite spaceship t-shirt T-shirts!

see details
Pak Pak Monster T-shirts!

see details
BASIC code T-shirts!

see details
Breakout T-shirts!

see details
Pixel adventure T-shirts!

see details
Vector ship T-shirts!

see details





A > ATARI  > PONG (Model C-100)   


Atari
PONG (Model C-100)

As early as 1974, Atari started to design a home version of PONG, originally proposed by Harold Lee in 1973. The system was designed by three engineers: Harold Lee, Alan Alcorn and Bob Brown.

Because Magnavox Odyssey was already being left behind by customers (mostly due to their lack of satisfaction, and also the bad rumor that it would only work with a Magnavox TV set), sellers were not attracted by Atari's PONG game until Sears goes ahead and sells the system under their Tele-Games label for Christmas 1975. Following this huge success, Atari released its own version of PONG in 1976.

The system had an important feature that most others didn't have in 1975: the use of a single chip that provided games with digital on-screen scoring and attractive sound. As a matter of fact, other systems were still using analog or digital circuits using discrete components. Digial on-screen scoring would have required more components in the circuits, hence an increase of the retail price. Because Atari designed a special PONG chip, the system could sell at normal price with advanced features.

In 1975, Atari was rejected by toys and electronics manufacturers as most other PONG systems didn't sell much. One of Atari's directors decided to contact Tom Quinn, who worked at Sears/Roebuck. After several meetings with Bushnell, Sears ordered 150,000 PONG systems for Christmas. Assembled by Atari, the system sold under the Sears Tele-Games label (Pong model 25796). Some people still remember Christmas 1975 when they were going to the shops early in the morning and wait several hours to sign a list allowing them to receive a PONG system.

Pong will be a huge success, and will be the cause of multiple imitations and several law suits. However, its popularity did not fall until more advanced systems came on the market.

_________

Source : PONG-STORY.COM




Please consider donating your old computer / videogame system to Old-Computers.com or one of our partners from anywhere in the world (Europe, America, Asia, etc.).


 

I would like to say.. You all succ

          
Thursday 18th January 2018
Big Tasty  (England )

My Grandpa is Tom Quinn

          
Friday 25th October 2013
Brad

Steven, i have a pong with the same model number that your pong (637.99716).

          
Friday 9th March 2012
linus (Viña del Mar/Chile)

 

NAME  PONG (Model C-100)
MANUFACTURER  Atari
TYPE  
ORIGIN  U.S.A.
YEAR  1976
BUILT IN LANGUAGE  Simple pong game (the original one!)
KEYBOARD  Two built-in spinners
CPU  Atari chipset
SPEED  Start
CO-PROCESSOR  Power on/off
RAM  On screen
COLORS  Black & white
SOUND  Built-in speaker
SIZE / WEIGHT  Unknown
I/O PORTS  RF TV video output
OS  Unknown
POWER SUPPLY  External power supply unit
PERIPHERALS  No
PRICE  55$ (USA)



Software for this system!

PONG
1975 Atari
 
 
 
game




Please buy a t-shirt to support us !
Ready prompt
ZX Spectrum
ZX81
Arcade cherry
Spiral program
Atari joystick
Battle Zone
Vectrex ship
C64 maze generator
Moon Lander
Competition Pro Joystick
Atari ST bombs
Elite spaceship t-shirt
Commodore 64 prompt
Pak Pak Monster
Pixel Deer
BASIC code
Shooting gallery
3D Cubes
Pixel adventure
Breakout
Vector ship

Related Ebay auctions in real time - click to buy yours



see more Atari  PONG (Model C-100) Ebay auctions !



 
Click here to go to the top of the page   
Contact us | members | about old-computers.com | donate old-systems | FAQ
OLD-COMPUTERS.COM is hosted by - NYI (New York Internet) -