The cathode ray tube amusement device is the earliest known interactive electronic game to use a cathode ray tube (CRT). It is a device that records and controls the quality of an electronic signal.
— -- Was "Tennis for Two" really the world's first video game? It hardly matters. The distinction may belong to something called a "Cathode-Ray Tube Amusement Device" by Thomas Goldsmith and ...
In 1947, an engineer in Greenville, South Carolina, filed a patent for a “Cathode Ray Tube amusement device.” It had a little cannon that shot a little cannonball at a target on a little cathode ray ...
Toxic glass from old-style television sets and computer monitors could end up polluting landfills if new uses for them are not found soon, scientists warn. Open up an old TV and you'll find a ...
Ask 10 people when the video game industry first began and you’re bound to get 10 different answers. Was it in 1947, with the invention of the cathode-ray tube amusement device by physicists Thomas T.
Henry O. Marcy III, 81, founder and former chairman of Syntronic Instruments Inc. of Addison, became an internationally known expert in creating components for specialized cathode-ray tube displays.
Do you see that retro-looking device above? That's a cathode ray tube amusement device, one of the one of the first… Advertisement Do you see that retro-looking device above? That's a cathode ray tube ...