http://www.cwhdallas.com/house-commodore/
House Commodore
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| Commodore 64 / C64 ~ Forth+ by Melbourne House ~ Sealed | ![]() |
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US $12.56 | 1d 11h 28m |
| Commodore C64 ~ The House Jack Built by Thor ~ SEALED | ![]() |
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US $4.70 | 19d 12h 24m |
| Street Maze manual by Computer House - Commodore Vic-20 | ![]() |
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US $19.99 | 28d 23h 59m |
| Commodore William Edgar House Newport RI 1969 Photo 3 | ![]() |
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US $3.25 | 26d 18h 56m |
| Commodore William Edgar House Newport RI 1969 Photo 1 | ![]() |
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US $3.25 | 26d 18h 55m |
| Hartland ME Commodore Club House c1910 Postcard | ![]() |
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US $4.79 | 18d 14h 19m |
| DREAM HOUSE Commodore 64/128 Disk & Manual TESTED WORKING | ![]() |
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US $10.00 | 17d 22h 56m |
| Post Mills, VT - Commodore House | ![]() |
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US $5.75 | 14d 22h 34m |
| LITTLE COMPUTER PEOPLE Commodore Amiga HOUSE ON A DISK | ![]() |
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US $124.95 | 12d 12h 30m |
| COMMODORE PERRY JAPAN RANDOM HOUSE LANDMARK PICTURE BOOK + VIKING FOLK LORE MYTH | ![]() |
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US $29.75 | 12d 2h 18m |
| New In Box CHARLIE BROWN'S ABC'S by Random House for Commodore 64 Disk Rare | ![]() |
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US $15.00 | 11d 11h 25m |
| 1911 Flyer Friendly House Commodore Benedict Indian Harbor Greenwich Brooklyn NY | ![]() |
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US $250.00 | 10d 22h 3m |
| COMMODORE 64 / 128 FUN HOUSE Game Show Computer Game SEALED NIB | ![]() |
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US $9.99 | 9d 22h 33m |
| Vintage John Elways Quarterback Commodore 64 / 128 Game by Melbourne House | ![]() |
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US $11.77 | 8d 20h 40m |
| DEATH COMMODORE VANDERBILT HOUSE CHURCH 1877 Art Matte | ![]() |
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US $40.00 | 8d 20h 5m |
| Rare Commodore 64 C64 Game Cassette Fighting Warrior Melbourne House | ![]() |
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US $29.99 | 22d 10h 33m |
| POST MILLS VT COMMODORE HOUSE VERMONT VINTAGE POSTCARD | ![]() |
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US $5.89 | 6d 11h 27m |
| Commodore William Edgar House Newport RI 1969 Photo 7 | ![]() |
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US $3.25 | 6d 44m |
| Commodore William Edgar House Newport RI 1969 Photo 2 | ![]() |
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US $3.25 | 6d 44m |
| Erie County Pa Wills Commodore Hull House Nat Defense | ![]() |
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US $4.75 | 5d 22h 21m |
| Commodore Stephen Decatur House, Benjamin Henry Latrobe | ![]() |
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US $8.99 | 5d 15h 36m |
| Commodore Stephen Decatur House, Benjamin Henry Latrobe | ![]() |
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US $8.99 | 5d 15h 36m |
| Commodore Stephen Decatur House, 748 Jackson Place,D.C. | ![]() |
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US $8.99 | 5d 15h 36m |
| Commodore Stephen Decatur House, Benjamin Henry Latrobe | ![]() |
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US $8.99 | 5d 15h 36m |
| Commodore Stephen Decatur House,Benjamin Henry Latrobe | ![]() |
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US $8.99 | 5d 15h 36m |
| Commodore Stephen Decatur House, Lafayette Square Park | ![]() |
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US $8.99 | 5d 15h 36m |
| Commodore Stephen Decatur House, Lafayette Square Park | ![]() |
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US $8.99 | 5d 15h 36m |
| Commodore Stephen Decatur House, 748 Jackson Place,D.C. | ![]() |
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US $8.99 | 5d 15h 36m |
| Commodore Stephen Decatur House, Benjamin Henry Latrobe | ![]() |
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US $8.99 | 5d 15h 36m |
| Commodore C64 ~ Starion by Melbourne House ~ Clam Case | ![]() |
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US $7.84 | 4d 15h 23m |
| Gotcha Math manual *Comm-Data Computer House) - Commodore Vic-20 | ![]() |
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US $11.99 | 3d 22h 32m |
| Commodore James House, Newport, RI, Uused postcard | ![]() |
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US $2.99 | 3d 18h 28m |
| Commodore C64 ~ Kwah! ~ M.House ~ DCC ~ New | ![]() |
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US $6.27 | 1d 12h 45m |
| Commodore C64 ~ Gyroscope by Melbourne House ~ SCC | ![]() |
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US $14.13 | 12h |
| FUN HOUSE - IBM PC / COMMODORE 64 GAME IN BOX RARE L@@K !!!! | ![]() |
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US $14.99 | 9d 22h 41m |
| Commodore VT VX VY VZ door handle right front hot house | ![]() |
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US $41.31 | 28d 21h 3m |
| Commodore VY VZ Custom Painted Dash Kit Hot House Green SS HSV | ![]() |
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US $830.97 | 21d 1h 27m |
| Commodore VY VZ brand new hot house leather hand brake | ![]() |
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US $138.03 | 20d 23h 18m |
| Commodore Ute Utility VU VY VZ LH Quarter Pillar Trim Hot House Green ss 4blok | ![]() |
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US $80.18 | 7d 1h 56m |
| Commodore Ute Utility VU VY VZ RH Quarter Pillar Trim Hot House Green ss 4blok | ![]() |
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US $80.18 | 7d 1h 56m |
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GEOS PROGRAM/REF GUIDE (Bantam Commodore User's Library) List Price: $19.95 |
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BIG TIP BOOK (The Bantam Commodore user's library) List Price: $16.95 |
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The First Tycoon: The Epic Life of Cornelius Vanderbilt List Price: $19.95 Sale Price: $9.95 |
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NATIONAL BESTSELLERWINNER OF THE NATIONAL BOOK AWARDIn this groundbreaking biography, T.J. Stiles tells the dramatic story of Cornelius “Commodore” Vanderbilt, the combative man and American icon who, through his genius and force of will, did more than perhaps any other individual to create modern capitalism. Meticulously researched and elegantly written, The First Tycoon describes an improbable life, from Vanderbilt’s humble birth during the presidency of George Washington to his death as one of the richest men in American history. In between we see how the Commodore helped to launch the transportation revolution, propel the Gold Rush, reshape Manhattan, and invent the modern corporation. Epic in its scope and success, the life of Vanderbilt is also the story of the rise of America itself. Book Description A gripping, groundbreaking biography of the combative man whose genius and force of will created modern capitalism. Founder of a dynasty, builder of the original Grand Central, creator of an impossibly vast fortune, Cornelius “Commodore” Vanderbilt is an American icon. Humbly born on Staten Island during George Washington’s presidency, he rose from boatman to builder of the nation’s largest fleet of steamships to lord of a railroad empire. Lincoln consulted him on steamship strategy during the Civil War; Jay Gould was first his uneasy ally and then sworn enemy; and Victoria Woodhull, the first woman to run for president of the United States, was his spiritual counselor. We see Vanderbilt help to launch the transportation revolution, propel the Gold Rush, reshape Manhattan, and invent the modern corporation—in fact, as T. J. Stiles elegantly argues, Vanderbilt did more than perhaps any other individual to create the economic world we live in today. In The First Tycoon, Stiles offers the first complete, authoritative biography of this titan, and the first comprehensive account of the Commodore’s personal life. It is a sweeping, fast-moving epic, and a complex portrait of the great man. Vanderbilt, Stiles shows, embraced the philosophy of the Jacksonian Democrats and withstood attacks by his conservative enemies for being too competitive. He was a visionary who pioneered business models. He was an unschooled fistfighter who came to command the respect of New York’s social elite. And he was a father who struggled with a gambling-addicted son, a husband who was loving yet abusive, and, finally, an old man who was obsessed with contacting the dead. The First Tycoon is the exhilarating story of a man and a nation maturing together: the powerful account of a man whose life was as epic and complex as American history itself. Excerpts from an Interview with T.J. Stiles Question: Your last book was a biography of Jesse James. What drew you to Cornelius Vanderbilt as your next subject? T.J. Stiles: I was drawn by who he was as a person, the lack of writing about him, and the historical themes that defined his life. Like Jesse James, Vanderbilt was man of action--decisive, dramatic, and always interesting. He courted physical danger, fought high-stakes financial battles, and always set the terms of his existence. Like Jesse James, Vanderbilt has not been the subject of much serious research. And like Jesse James, Vanderbilt opened a window on the making of modern America. Vanderbilt was central to the rise of the corporation, the emergence of Wall Street, and the birth of big business. His was a dramatic life played out on an enormous stage. Q:How long have you been working on this book and what kind of research went into it? TJS: I worked on it for more than six years. My research was challenging because Vanderbilt kept no diary, preserved no letters, and left behind no collection of papers. Second, the last serious biography about him was written in 1942. The increasing digitization of newspapers and Congressional documents helped, but I did most of my work the old-fashioned way, digging through archives and sitting in front of microfilm readers. My biggest discovery came when I stumbled upon the Old Records Division of the New York County Clerk’s Office; I spent months there going through original lawsuit papers from as early as 1816. I uncovered entire episodes of Vanderbilt’s life that no one ever suspected--fistfights, steamboats ramming each other, inside trading and noncompetition agreements, details about his physical office and epic tales of betrayal. I also focused on Vanderbilt’s associates and rivals, and found priceless letters about him in their papers. Of course, I spent months more going through the papers of his various railroad corporations at the New York Public Library. I found so much new material that I decided to include a lengthy bibliographical essay. Q:Throughout the book, you highlight Vanderbilt's role in the making of the modern idea of economic regulation. You also write, "The Commodore’s life left its mark on Americans’ most basic beliefs about equality and opportunity." Where in our modern institutions do you think his legacy is most apparent? TJS: Vanderbilt early on voiced a political philosophy rooted in radical Jacksonianism. He believed in individual equality, in the right to compete freely. He denounced monopolies and corporations. This strain of thought remains a key part of American values. Yet he ended his life at the pinnacle of an incredibly unequal society, the master of a giant corporation that overshadowed almost every other business in America. That late-life transformation strongly influenced the new acceptance of government regulation that arose after the Civil War. I don’t think so much that Vanderbilt’s legacy can be seen in our institutions as much as our economic culture--the rise of the modern idea that government should intervene to regulate large businesses, and redress the balance of wealth and power in society. Q: What do you think Vanderbilt would have to say about our current economic climate; its root causes as well as the ever increasing bail-outs of giant corporations? TJS: When the Panic of 1873 hit, Vanderbilt gave an immediate analysis to a newspaper reporter that virtually describes the current situation. The problem was asset inflation: a speculative bubble (in his case, railroads, in our case, real estate) that tamped down skepticism about the value of securities issued by overvalued companies (or, in our case, mortgage-backed securities based on shaky home loans). Eager to ride the rising wave, banks in New York marketed the securities abroad, giving a stamp of approval, much as they have done with mortgage-backed securities today. In other words, Vanderbilt would have understood the root causes of our crisis, despite the great differences in the economy between then and now. And, though he usually looked askance at government intervention, the seriousness of the situation might have led him to approve of strong action. It’s hard to say, because he denounced subsidies, yet after the Panic of 1873 he also urged the federal government to pump new money into the economy. In any case, he would have had a sophisticated grasp of our conundrum. Q:Your own family history recently made national news when it was discovered, at The Smithsonian in Washington, DC, that one of President Lincoln's watches contained a secret inscription from your great-great grandfather. That must have been pretty exciting for you, not only as a family member but as a historian who has written extensively about the Civil War. How do you feel about this news and what do you make of all the attention it received? TJS:The news accounts floored me. I never expected this favorite family story, one I never quite believed, to enter national mythology. My great-great-grandfather, Jonathan Dillon, was an Irish immigrant who was working in a Washington, D.C., watch repair shop when Fort Sumter was fired on. He happened to be holding Lincoln's watch in his hand. He made an inscription on the back of the dial, closed it up, and said nothing to Lincoln about it. My second cousin, Douglas Stiles, tracked the watch to the Smithsonian's Museum of American History, and convinced the director to open the watch up and check. The message was there--a little different from my great-great-grandfather's memory, but it was there. I think it struck a chord with the nation at the moment of Lincoln's bicentennial. Here was a plucky, immigrant watchmaker who left a silent message of encouragement in Lincoln's pocket. No fanfare, nothing attention grabbing, just a patriotic, very human little act. I grew up with this story, and named my own son Dillon, in a kind of chain tribute to Jonathan Dillon, the watchmaker. (My father's middle name is Dillon, and of course it was my great-grandmother Isabella Dillon's maiden name.) When he was born in 2007, I often told the story about Lincoln's watch. If I had my doubts about it, I figured that no one would dare tear open Lincoln's watch to check. Glad they did. As a historian, I found it particularly startling to be brought so close to perhaps the most important American of any era. I wrote about Lincoln in The First Tycoon. Now I know that, as he held an urgent conference with Cornelius Vanderbilt over how best to deal with the Confederate ironclad Merrimack, he might have had in his pocket a secret message from my great-great-grandfather. The story adds an immediacy to the past, showing how close any one of us is to great historical events. (Photo © Joanne Chan) |
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C64 Classix 2 : More than 500 Full Games (PC/MAC-CD) Sale Price: $14.99 |
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Join us on a fascinating trip through the wonderful world of the legendary Commodore 64. Relive many of the great games from days long gone by. C64 ClassiX takes you back there and contains 500 games from those days, when 64K RAM was all you needed to spend endless hours of fun. Here are the names of just a few: Defender of the Crown, TV Sports Football, Rescue Squad, Sinbad and the Throne of the Falcon, Skeet Meganova, Knight Raider, Satan, Target, Connection, Blipblaster, Base Sottomarina, Castle of the Doom, Lazer Maze 2, Navy Moves, Vincent, The Vikings, Thorion 1+2, Space Battle Deluxe, Skramble, Space Taxi, Night of the walking Dead, Revenge of the Toothless Vampire, Helicopter Mission, Meganova, Time Runner, Haunted House, Temple of Dreg, Adventure Castle, Box World, Blackpool Tower |
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Darkside & Morphicle |
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Plastic Case,Disk and Cover |
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Fun House |
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Box,Disk and instruction sheet |
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20th Century Masters: The Best of The Commodores - The Millennium Collection List Price: $5.98 Sale Price: $2.59 |
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All products are BRAND NEW and factory sealed. Fast shipping and 100% Satisfaction Guaranteed. |
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Ultimate Collection List Price: $13.98 Sale Price: $6.58 |
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Ultimate Collection |
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Live List Price: $10.99 Sale Price: $7.41 |
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1993 reissue on Motown of their 1977 live album for the label (which reached #3 in the U.S.!). Lionel Richie, who left the band in 1982, is vocalist on all 12 tracks, which include the studio version of their top 30 smash 'Too Hot TaTrot', plus concert renditions of many of their biggest & best, including 'Brickhouse', 'Easy', 'Fancy Dancer', 'Just To Be Close To You', 'Sweet Love' & 'Slippery When Wet'. |
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Commodore Stephen Decatur House, Benjamin Henry Latrobe Sale Price: $8.99 |
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8x12in Print from a low-quality scan of the original. Please Note: The quality of this particular photo is NOT very good.Combined Shipping: 1 shipping charge, no matter how many photos you order!Source: Library of Congress, Washington, D.C. |
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Commodore Stephen Decatur House, Benjamin Henry Latrobe Sale Price: $8.99 |
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8x12in Print from a low-quality scan of the original. Please Note: The quality of this particular photo is NOT very good.Combined Shipping: 1 shipping charge, no matter how many photos you order!Source: Library of Congress, Washington, D.C. |
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Vanderbilt University Commodores House Flag List Price: $27.95 Sale Price: $23.95 |
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Vanderbilt University Commodores House Flag is 30x40 inches in size, is made of single-ply polyester with double-sided bottom school panel, has a top sleeve for insertion of a wood or aluminum flagpole, and the Licensed NCAA School logos are screen printed into this Vanderbilt University Commodores House Flag. |
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NCAA Under Armour Vanderbilt Commodores Gold Protect This House Performance Training T-shirt List Price: $30.00 |
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Under Armour Vanderbilt Commodores Gold Protect This House Performance Training T-shirtOfficially licensed collegiate productScreen print graphics100% PolyesterTagless collarLightweight performance topImportedHeatGear fabric delivers maximum moisture transport, keeping you cool and dry as the temperature risesAntimicrobial material to prevent bacteria growth and odorSmall Under Armour jock tag on upper back100% PolyesterLightweight performance topHeatGear fabric delivers maximum moisture transport, keeping you cool and dry as the temperature risesAntimicrobial material to prevent bacteria growth and odorScreen print graphicsSmall Under Armour jock tag on upper backTagless collarImportedOfficially licensed collegiate product |
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NCAA Vanderbilt Commodores 27-by-37 inch Vertical Flag List Price: $23.99 Sale Price: $22.99 |
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Officially licensed flag. Designed to hang vertically from an outdoor pole or inside as wall decor. Durable polyester flag measures 27" x 37" with a 2.5" pole sleeve. Machine washable. Poles and hardware available separately. Made in USA. |
When I was at school I was asked by my careers teacher what I wanted to do when I grew up, and I answered without hesitation, "make video games".
It was a no brainer. I had been interested in computers, and games, for as long as I could remember. Some of my earliest memories are of playing Qbert and Scramble in the local arcade, or sitting on the floor of our living room, with a Commodore Vic 20 plugged into the old wood-effect paneled television.
At school I chose IT as a GCSE option and aced it, at college I took computer Science and quickly realised that I knew more about the subject than my tutor, and then went on to study computer science and electronic engineering at university. However, as I progressed through my education my love of the subject waned, as I found myself being taught more and more about managerial roles and work flow than about what I really loved - games, and programming.
In fact I dropped my computer science degree after the first year, later graduating in audio and video engineering, and it wasn't until several years later that I got involved in the games industry. While several of my friends had gone on to work with games development companies, I had gone into web design, and it wasn't until I started developing Flash games that I eventually found myself doing what I had dreamed about as a child.
The strange thing is, I progressed faster in the games industry than several people I knew who took the more "traditional" route of a university degree. While they were working their way up the ranks, I drew the attention of big clients not because of my education, but because of my experience.
More recently I've got to know 2 people who came into the industry via yet another path, and it's one that simply wasn't available to me at the time, but I wish it was.
Back in the 1980's video games were developed by small teams, often with a single person playing the role of designer, programmer, artist and musician, They were simple games, often produced on a very tight budget.
Conversely today's games often involve massive budgets and large teams. Grand Theft Auto 4 is reported to have a budget of $100 million and with that sort of money at stake, the development studios have to ensure quality assurance. That's where game testers come in.
If a game goes to market with mistakes, bugs, or bad gameplay it will get bad reviews, bad sales, and lose the studio potentially a lot of money. Therefore it's in the studio's interest to invest in testing to ensure that the games they produce are of the highest quality. This has opened up the new job position of "game tester" which is not only a dream job (or certainly would have been for me when leaving college 10 years ago!) but can also act as a gateway position to other jobs in the industry.
Game testing is notoriously difficult to get into, and the reality of the job is certainly a lot less glamorous than the title might suggest, with long hours and very repetitive work. However, game testers have the same advantage I had by developing independent games - industry experience! 2 or 3 years as a game tester will teach you a lot more about game development than the average college degree, and the games companies know this.
The best part about game testing is that it's possible to do it part time from home. Now, in reality these "teleworking" casual positions don't pay as well as full time in-house testing jobs, and the experience is nowhere near as good, but again it's a great gateway and allows you to gain experience while continuing an education - the best of both worlds.
A friend of mine recently asked me whether I would have finished my degree, if I knew then what I know now and had the chance at a games testing position instead. Certainly the game testing job would have given me more experience and probably got me further in the games industry faster. However, my answer was simply that I would have attempted to do both - get casual work as a games tester to build experience, and complete my degree at the same time. With this approach you get the best of both worlds, and massively increase your chances of becoming a successful games developer.
For a free report on how to break into the games industry, and start earning a game tester salary visit betagamestester.com
For free cooking game, and many other genres of online games visit kwikgames.com
Arcade Games: My evolution from the console placed arcade games to the internet located games
freearcade– The Good Ole Days
I think of playing my beginning arcade game in a bar in Montreal. It was 1981 I was dependent, intoxicated, in a digital frenzy, and the arcade game was the special Pacman. This was about the clearest matter I had of all time seen. I'd invariably had a thing for games, Sure earlier the beginning arcades and arcade games bounced up. Even in front computer games for the household PC. I practiced to take to games magazines that never, ever so referred the word computer. This was something completely otherwise and opulently winning. Infinite minutes of my intimately worthless youth were spent in arcades, endless after plenty of beer gulping at the localized pub. Arcade games, and computer games have come a careful direction since then, but there's nothing like your beginning time.
Frag This You Bourgeoisie Backgammond Barnacle
Soon after my spicy receive with arcades and the hypnotise arcade game jewels covered within, my family unit purchased it's beginning house PC. A radio shack trs-80. more ordinarily called a trash-80. It was here that I checked the cutely tricky game of backgammon. Not sure I would have ever so found that game without being familiarized to it by a computer. It's not the variety of game that would have attracted to a practised of the arcade game wars. Something that went to a greater extent to the smoky backrooms of a retirement home. Computers, arcades, and arcade games were already widening my views.
Avast Commodore, Ya Abject Mib
Consecutive on my list of scientific inquires ya monkeys, is the Commodore 64. Now here was an arcade game killer if I every stared upon one. Arcades are few and extreme between now, and the Commodore, is one of the understandings Why. Wherefore spend minutes in an arcade, having a machina nurse and swallow up every last fourth in my pouch? When I can sit in the less the luxurious degeneration of my cellar playing the the likes of jumpman, and limiting arcade game flair superior stacks for my baby brother to madly try to equal. Not like in the arcades where he could be mild in front of the batches, but this arcade game gem would function my resolves even so.
Arcadia Get Up Oh Strong Griffon
Older is innovative, black is blue, and from the deepness, grows the legends of old and times leaved. Huh? What I'm sparkling forth about here, is that arcade games are back with a payback. All us old fogies, who recollect time spent in arcades watching the vicinity dominates biff bad substantiate up till level 9999 triumph! You can once again relive the glorifications of the golden age of arcade games. Just google around a little, and you'll find free renderings of all the great arcade game from the past. Not to observe a few original fables being born in the ancient art of arcade games. And hey save your quarters. These games are free as the air you take a breather. Naturally you better not let those fourths get too far, your gonna claim them to sustenance that old jalopy of a Commodore in running order.
About the Author
Jolie Smith is a freelance content writer and a journalist. She has set on to write on Arcade games
so that it guide you all through the process of creating a good experince for who all are while
reading the article and while playing online games. She writes on online Free Arcade at
http://www.freearcade.com
throw away an old Commodore PC?
I was cleaning the house and was about to throw away some old computer stuff when I noticed that our old PC was a Commodore model PC-10, an 8088 with 2 floppy drives. Does this PC have any collectable value?
This is a rare model and should be sold as it is worth a lot.
Senior BA students strut their stuff
WHAT: "Senior BA Art Exhibition 2010" presented by the Plattsburgh State Art Department and Plattsburgh State Art Museum. WHEN: Through March 28. Opening reception from noon to 1:30 p.m. Light lunch served.
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