Nutting Associates

Nutting Associates was an arcade game manufacturer based in Mountain View, California, incorporated in February 1967 by William Gilbert Nutting.[1] In 1977 the company was purchased by William "Si" Redd and eventually absorbed into the company Sircoma.

Company logo.

History

Bill Nutting was working as a buyer at a San Francisco department store when his father-in-law, Revere Ware executive Herbert Ullmann, alerted him to an educational technology company called Edex Teaching Systems looking for investors. Nutting became a partner in the company, which created a coin-operated trivia game called the Knowledge Computer in 1964. Nutting marketed the machine for Edex and bought the rights to it after Edex was purchased by Raytheon in 1965. In January 1966, he founded Nutting Associates to market the Knowledge Computer and a redesigned version of the device called Computer Quiz (1967) created by Richard Ball of Marketing Services.[2] In 1968 the model was redesigned into a solid-state version.[1][3]

In 1971, Nolan Bushnell sold Nutting Associates on manufacturing the game Computer Space (1971). About 1,500 units were manufactured.[1] Afterwards, Bushnell wanted a large ownership stake in the company to continue creating games for Nutting Associates, but left after not being given that opportunity to form Atari Inc. with Ted Dabney.[4]

Nutting Associates continued manufacturing video games up until 1977 when the company was sold to "Si" Redd. A new Nutting Associates company was established in Nevada before being absorbed into the larger company Sircoma, a video poker manufacturer.[5]

Nutting's brother, Dave Nutting, also worked in the video game industry. He formed Dave Nutting Associates, a consulting firm that produced many of Midway's games during the 1970s and early 80s.[6]

gollark: Which uses a different, fully sandboxed VM so you can even use `debug`.
gollark: It is on CC: Tweaked, a fork which works lots better.
gollark: I don't see the problem. Poke at internal stuff and that computer might break.
gollark: Well, that breaks, what did you expect to happen?
gollark: Works fine.

References

  1. "A Nutty Idea". They Create Worlds. 2015-09-03. Retrieved 2017-09-26.
  2. Smith, Alexander (2019). They Create Worlds: The Story of the People and Companies That Shaped the Video Game Industry, Volume I. CRC Press. pp. 122–125. ISBN 9781138389908.
  3. Smith, Keith (2016-06-02). "The Golden Age Arcade Historian: The Ultimate (so Far) History of Nutting Associates - Part 1". The Golden Age Arcade Historian. Retrieved 2017-09-26.
  4. Smith, Keith (2016-06-10). "The Golden Age Arcade Historian: The Ultimate (so Far) History of Nutting Associates - Part 2". The Golden Age Arcade Historian. Retrieved 2017-09-26.
  5. Smith, Keith (2016-06-21). "The Golden Age Arcade Historian: The Ultimate (so Far) History of Nutting Associates - Part 3". The Golden Age Arcade Historian. Retrieved 2017-09-26.
  6. Smith, Keith (2014-07-12). "The Golden Age Arcade Historian: The (Pre) History of Night Driver - Part 4: 280 Zzzap - prehistory". The Golden Age Arcade Historian. Retrieved 2017-09-26.
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