Cyan Engineering
Cyan Engineering was an American computer engineering company located in Grass Valley, California.[1][2] It was founded by Steve Mayer and Larry Emmons. The company was purchased in 1973 by Atari Inc. and developed the Atari VCS console, which was released in 1977 and renamed the Atari 2600 in November 1982. It also carried out some robotics research and development work on behalf of Atari, including the Kermit mobile robot, originally intended as a stand-alone product intended to bring a beer.[3]
Further reading
- Goldberg, Marty; Vendel, Curt (November 26, 2012). Atari Inc.: Business is Fun. Syzygy Press. ISBN 978-0985597405.
gollark: English is very ambiguous and bad.
gollark: Thus, "random nitpicking".
gollark: Oh, I'm randomly nitpicking.
gollark: It's 70%, and that assumes that the chance of each protest in a location being violent is independent, which is not true.
gollark: I have no idea about *that*, but it's not valid to say "12 protests in your area → guaranteed (i.e. 100% or nearly) chance of one or more being violent".
References
- "Atari's "Think Tank" – Cyan Engineering". Atomic Toasters. May 23, 2014. Archived from the original on 29 October 2015. Retrieved 10 August 2015.
- https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bfFGrQLuY8s Atari's Cyan Engineering - Splendor in the Grass documentary
- Hoggett, Reuben (16 October 2015). "1978 – "Kermit" the Robot – Ron Milner and Larry Nicolson (American)". cyberneticzoo.com. Retrieved 26 October 2015.
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