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  1. De Satoru Iwata ( Japanesch: 岩田 聡), gebuer de 6. Dezember 1959 a gestuerwen den 11. Juli 2015 [1], war e japanesche Videospillentwéckler a Firmechef. Wärend sengem Studium op der Universitéit vun Technologië vun Tokio, gouf hie vun HAL Laboratory als Deelzäitaarbechter engagéiert. No sengem Studium krut hien do eng fest Plaz.

  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › HobonichiHobonichi - Wikipedia

    Hobonichi. Hobo Nikkan Itoi Shinbun (ほぼ日刊イトイ新聞, lit. Almost Daily Itoi Newspaper), also known as Hobonichi (ほぼ日), is a Japanese company run by Hobonichi Co., Ltd. that designs and produces various daily life products such as T-shirts and notebooks. The company was founded by copywriter Shigesato Itoi (a.k.a. "Darling ...

  3. 4. Sept. 2019 · Satoru Iwata på spillutviklernes konferanse i 2011. Upload media Wikipedia Wikiquote. Spoken text audio: Name in native language: 悟 岩田; Date of birth: 6 December 1959 Sapporo: Date of death: 11 July 2015 Kyoto: Manner of death: na ...

  4. Ivata Szatoru ( 岩田聡; Hepburn: Satoru Iwata? ; Szapporo, 1959. december 6. – Kiotó, 2015. július 11.) japán üzletember és programozó, a Nintendo negyedik elnöke és vezérigazgatója (CEO). Pályafutása kezdetén a HAL Laboratorynál dolgozott programozóként, 2000-ben csatlakozott a Nintendóhoz, majd 2002-ben átvette a cég ...

  5. Satoru Iwata (岩田 聡) was a Japanese businessman, video game programmer, video game designer, and producer. He was the fourth president of Nintendo, succeeding Hiroshi Yamauchi, and the first Nintendo president not related to the previous presidents by blood or marriage. He contributed to the Nintendo GameCube and was responsible for its sales.

  6. Biography edit · view history. Satoru Iwata (岩田 聡 - 6th December 1959 - 11th July 2015) was the fourth president of Nintendo, and was the former president of HAL Laboratory. During high school, Iwata created simplistic games that were playable on calculators, and once he completed college at the Tokyo Institute of Technology in 1982, he ...

  7. Iwata purchased an HP-65, the first programmable calculator, in 1974. As most of the sources claim that it is an HP-65, this particular source from 4Gamer, a reliable source, claims HP-67. Japanese Wikipedia adopts this and says HP-67. I personally believe that 4Gamer made a mistake, but I am not 100 percent sure.