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ICT And Entertainment

  • First Ever Console

    First Ever Console
    Television engineer Ralph Baer created "The Brown Box" in 1968.
  • NES

    NES
    The NES is a retro gaming console. The Nintendo Entertainment System offered a number of groundbreaking titles. Super Mario Bros. pioneered side-scrollers while The Legend of Zelda helped popularize battery-backed save functionality.
  • Google

    Google
    Google began in January 1996 as a research project by Larry Page and Sergey Brin when they were both PhD students at Stanford University in Stanford, California and has now evolved into the most popular search engine on the internet
  • XBOX

    XBOX
    The original Xbox was released on November 15, 2001 in North America, February 22, 2002 in Japan, and March 14, 2002 in Australia and Europe. It was Microsoft's first foray into the gaming console market
  • Facebook

    Facebook
    Facebook is one of the most popular social networking websites
  • Youtube Is Founded

    Youtube Is Founded
    Youtube is a website that allows you to create or watch videos online. People who are popular on youtube can make millions.
  • Netflix is founded

    Netflix is founded
    Netflix is a website that allows you to watch movies and tv shows online free of charge
  • Snapchat Was Founded

    Snapchat Was Founded
    Snapchat was started by Brown and Spiegel as a project for one of Spiegel's classes at Stanford University, where Spiegel was a product design major. Beginning under the name "Picaboo," the two later brought Murphy into the project to code the application. When Spiegel floated the idea in April 2011 in front of the product design class for his final project, classmates balked at the idea of the impermanent photos.[8] Snapchat first launched in July 2011 under the name Picaboo in Spiegel's father
  • Instagram

    Instagram
  • PS5 is released

    PS5 is released
    The next generation of playstation is released
  • Computer is smarter than a Human

    Computer is smarter than a Human
    In the last few days we've seen a spate of headlines like 2029: the year when robots will have the power to outsmart their makers, all occasioned by an Observer interview with Google's newest director of engineering Ray Kurzweil.