- Thomas T. Goldsmith Jr.
Thomas Toliver Goldsmith, Jr. was an early
television pioneer, the inventor of thefirst video game , and a professor of physics atFurman University .Biography
Goldsmith was born in
Greenville, South Carolina on January 10, 1910.citation|title=Thomas Goldsmith: An Interview|first=Frank|last=Polkinghorn|publisher=IEEE History Center|date=May 14, 1973|url=http://www.ieee.org/web/aboutus/history_center/oral_history/abstracts/goldsmith8ab.html.] citation|title=Contributors|journal=Proceedings of the I.R.E.|date=1944|page=248|url=http://ieeexplore.ieee.org/iel5/10933/35706/01694967.pdf.] He received his B.S. at Furman University in Greenville in 1931, in physics, and his Ph.D. fromCornell University in 1936, under the supervision of Dr. Frederick Van Bide.List of emeriti in [http://www.furman.edu/catalog/2005-2006_catalog.pdf Furman University catalog 2005–2006] , p. 149.] After graduating from Cornell, he became director of research forDuMont Laboratories , and (after 1953) vice president; [citation|title=3 Promoted by DuMont; Officials of Laboratories Are Made Vice Presidents|journal=New York Times |date=November 23, 1953.] he chaired the Synchronization Panel of the National Television System Committee and also the Radio Manufacturers Association Committee on Cathode-Ray Tubes. He also became the chief engineer for theDuMont Television Network ; [citation|title=The Forgotten Network: Dumont and the Birth of American Television|first=David|last=Weinstein|publisher=Temple University Press|year=2004|isbn=1592134998.] television stationWTTG , formerly in the DuMont network, is named for his initials. [citation|title=WTTG Marks 50 Years; Born In a Hotel Room|journal=Washington Post |first=Patricia|last=Brennan|date=May 14, 1995.] In 1966 he left DuMont to become a professor ofphysics at Furman,citation|title=Scopes' story: fits and starts|journal=EE Times|url=http://www.eetimes.com/anniversary/designclassics/scopes.html|date=1997.] and he retired to become an emeritus professor in 1975.The first video game
US patent|2,455,992, granted to Goldsmith and Estle Ray Mann in 1948, describes what may be the world's first
video game , and also the first video game patent. [citation|title=Patents Are Becoming Crucial to Video Games|first=Gregory P.|last=Silberman|journal=The National Law Journal|date=August 30, 2006|url=http://www.law.com/jsp/article.jsp?id=1156855192674.] Entitled "Cathode Ray Tube Amusement Device", the patent described a game involving aiming missiles at a target, and was inspired by theradar displays used inWorld War II .Awards and honors
Goldsmith is a Life Fellow of the
Society of Motion Picture and Television Engineers . [ [https://www.smpte.org/membership/member_grades/life_fellows Life Fellows – SMPTE.org] .] In 1949, he won anInstitute of Radio Engineers Award "For his contributions in the development of cathode-ray instrumentation and in the field of television." [citation|title=I.R.E. Awards 1949|journal=Proceedings of the I.R.E.|volume=37|issue=4|year=1949|pages=412–415|url=http://ieeexplore.ieee.org/xpls/abs_all.jsp?arnumber=1698002.] In 1979, the Radio Club of America honored Goldsmith with the first Allan B. DuMont Citation for "important contributions in the field of electronics to the science of television". [ [http://www.radioclubofamerica.org/people.php?page=awards.html Radio Club of America – Awards] .] In 1999, Goldsmith won the first Dr. Charles Townes Individual Achievement Award as part of the Innovision Technology Awards competition honoring innovation in the upstate South Carolina area. [ [http://www.innovisionaward.org/pwinners.php Innovision Technology Award winners] ; citation|title=Seeking companies with 'InnoVision'|journal=Greenville News|first=Terry|last=Weaver|date=June 14, 2004|url=http://greenvilleonline.com/news/opinion/2004/06/14/2004061433320.htm.]References
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