rolenta, on Thu Jul 21, 2011 8:09 PM, said:
After all when we refer to Missile Command, we don't call it MISSILE COMMAND.
We as in? It was used as all caps in the 2600 and 5200 manuals as well. If by we you mean writers, and press and people who post in forums, certainly and that speaks more towards onmode-ky's point.
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However I found a 1996 article that Bushnell
wrote and in several places he refers to the game as 'Pong'.
Wrote and edited/published are two different things. As I mentioned, that was from the ACM which like most publications has editors and standards it imposes on written material. It's far more likely that it was put in to that format as part of the process. Especially if as you say, he responded to Mark with "PONG" when directly asked. It's not a lot different than how Ralph uses video games and you edited to a standard (throughout) videogames when you produced his book.
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My argument is that the fliers show the name in all caps because it was a new game and Atari natually wanted people to notice it.
You'd need some direct interview or comment wise to support that, otherwise it's a theory. As I mentioned, the actual trademark filing is all caps as well. Likewise in all the marketing materials and original home PONG manual, it's even used in all caps in paragraphs of text as well. And while it was new in 1972, it ceased being new after that so that logic doesn't make sense in light of the continued usage of all caps except for the few exceptions (more likely mistakes by layout people) we mentioned or when it was referring more to a genre (such as the Robot Pong game on the 2600 variant).
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Wikipedia, which Marty told me he was involved in a discussion with concerning this subject, refers to it as "Pong (marketed as PONG)".
You're misreading the ramifications of that. The discussion there was in whether we could include all caps or not for the article, and the result was that there's a certain laid out guideline regarding no caps for all articles (across the board) that the PONG one had to follow. Wikipedia only allows caps for acronyms. The compromise was the addition of the parenthesized statement in the intro.
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I sent Marty a copy of the instruction manual for the 2600's Video Olympics, which refers to it as Pong.
As I mentioned, one of the few mistakes/exceptions. It happened on the Puppy Pong flyer as well, and it's certainly not without precedent. How many times has Yars' Revenge been misspelled as Yar's by Atari's own people over the years? Enough that the current Atari went back in the mid-2000's to trademark that spelling as well.
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Finally, Ted Dabney wrote to me: "As I recall, all of the PONG brochures have it spelt with all caps. I have always written it as "Pong" but I think "PONG" is probably the proper way. I personally like "Pong" and will stay with it. After all, Pong is a name not an acronym. I'm with you on this one."
So my question to all of you: which way do you prefer?
I think that's the right idea. If historical vs. literary accuracy isn't important, just go with what people here want. After all, they're the ones that'll be reading and enjoying whatever you're writing.
Edited by wgungfu, Fri Jul 22, 2011 3:25 PM.