By Reece Nations “Practically everyone knows tic-tac-toe.” — Josef Kates interviewed in 2014. The halls of the Canadian National Exhibition’s Electrical and Engineering Building were buzzing with excitement on Aug. 25, 1950. Situated on a picturesque piece of land north of Lake Ontario known locally as Toronto’s “Exhibition Place,” its grounds have hosted generations of […]
Bye bye, Bertie: How an AI and Gaming icon was lost to time
November 10, 2023 by Reece Nations
Filed Under: Blogs, Featured, Opinion, Personal Essays, Video Games Tagged With: additron tube, Annals of the History of Computing, arcade games, artificial intelligence, Bertie the Brain, canada, Canadian National Exhibition, CNE, computer science, computing design, computing history, Danny Kaye, early computing, Exhibition Place, Freddie Williams, historical preservation, John Vardalas, Josef Kates, Manchester University, McGill University, Montreal, Rogers Majestic, Science Council of Canada, scientific advancement, The Computer Revolution in Canada: Building National Technological Competence, The Ex, Toronto, transistors, University of Toronto, University of Toronto Computation Centre, University of Toronto Electronic Computer, University of Waterloo, UTEC Mark I, Video Games, williams tube, World War II