- Andy Gavin
Andy Gavin (b. 1970) is a programmer notable for co-founding the video game company
Naughty Dog with childhood friendJason Rubin in 1986.Naughty Dog 's games (most famously,Crash Bandicoot ) are known for their combination of exceptional technology, great graphics, and polished gameplay. The sophistication ofNaughty Dog technology is often credited to Gavin's background inLISP at theMIT Artificial Intelligence Laboratory .Education
Gavin studied for his Ph.D. at M.I.T. where he did research for the
Jet Propulsion Laboratory on the Mars Rover Vision Project, under his advisorRod Brooks . While still a student, Gavin learned the computer programming languageLISP . Influences from M.I.T. and his own work lead him to develop a number of custom programming languages that improved the quality of graphics, controls, sounds and artificial intelligence inNaughty Dog video games. He also has a B.S. fromHaverford College in Neuro Biological Science.Career
Together, Gavin and Rubin sold their first video game called Math Jam in 1985. A few games later they sold
Keef the Thief in 1989 toElectronic Arts . In the early 90’s, they created a fighting game calledWay of the Warrior which eventually led to a multi-title deal with Universal Interactive Studios. It was under the auspices of this Universal deal that they produced the multi-million sellingCrash Bandicoot series from 1994 until 1999, and later segueing into the successfulJak and Daxter series of games. At the end of 2000, Rubin and Gavin soldNaughty Dog toSony Computer Entertainment America (SCEA). All in all, they created 14Naughty Dog games including Math Jam (1985), Ski Crazed (1986), Dream Zone (1987), Keef the Thief (1989),Rings of Power (1991),Way of the Warrior (1994),Crash Bandicoot (1996), Crash Bandicoot 2: Cortex Strikes Back (1997), Crash Bandicoot: Warped (1998), Crash Team Racing (1999), Jak and Daxter: The Precursor Legacy (2001), Jak 2 (2003), Jak 3 (2004) and Jak X: Combat Racing (2005).While at Naughty Dog, Gavin developed two LISP dialects for use in game development, GOOL (Game Object Oriented Lisp) and its successor GOAL (Game Oriented Assembly Lisp). These represented a departure from the mainstream in terms of language choice, and featured some innovations in design.
Shortly after leaving Naughty Dog, Gavin co-founded a new Internet startup called
Flektor with his former business partner,Jason Rubin , and former HBO executiveJason Kay . In May 2007, the company was sold toFox Interactive Media , which is a division ofNews Corp. Fox has described the company as: “a next-generation Web site that provides users with a suite of Web-based tools to transform their photos and videos into dynamic slideshows, postcards, live interactive presentations and video mash-ups.” In October 2007,Flektor partnered with its sister company,MySpace , andMTV to provide instant audience feedback via polls for the interactive MySpace / MTV Presidential Dialogues series with presidential candidate SenatorBarack Obama .Gavin continues to work for Fox Interactive Media.
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.