Many of these techniques can be applied to, you guessed it, video games
and other forms of entertainment, so when Sega of Japan heard about me,
they made me a very financially lucrative offer. Apparently, my reputation
was appealing enough to them even though I was not Japanese. Sega wanted
to have the best.
So, I became the director of research and development for SEGA in 1988, and
now, the work me and my colleagues have been doing are paying off in our
new products slated to come out next year. I like to compare myself and
my group to your "Lockheed Skunk Works" who build high-performance aircraft.
We both work to push the frontier of our fields no matter what.
Dr. Samir Gupta
Head, SEGA New Technology Research Dept. Tokyo, Japan
sgu...@research.sega.jp
Well, I'm a student at MIT, so I think I'll head over to the library to see if
this guy is indeed a graduate of the 'tute. BTW, this "Smell-o-vision" thing was
done by Atari in 1983. Really. Read the April Fool's issue of Atari Age. I'll
let you guys know if this guy is legit.
- Shane
atar...@athena.mit.edu
Hehe, that's funny. That place has been closed for about two years now.
--
Marc A. Runkel marc....@registrar.umass.edu
Network Analyst Of course, this is just my
Registrar's Office * Systems Support Group tiny, insignificant, humble
University of Massachusetts, Amherst opinion. If you don't like it....