thinking about it and Fairchild just happened to come out first, probably because they had the head start. The most fun thing piece of trivia that I think of when I talked to Lawrence Haskell and Wallace Kirschner interviewed them from my article back in the day and their prototype cartridges had, I think if I'm remembering this correctly, they had a like a what they call a DB25 connector or a DE25 if you want to be technical or whatever it is. No, maybe it is a DB25 for that one, but it's like a bunch of pins…

Wallace Kirchner and Lawrence Haskell built a prototype and they shopped it around. And it caught the eye of people like Jerry Lawson over at Fairchild and they brought
In Context
... So Fairchild Channel F was the first game console with interchangeable program cartridges stored on ROM. Wallace Kirchner and Lawrence Haskell built a prototype and they shopped it around. And it caught the eye of people like Jerry Lawson over at Fairchild and they brought I think it was the F8, right, Kevin? Yep. The prototype was an 8080, I think. So, you know, it was just a fascinating story because Kevin knows this now, too, ...