In 2008, Braben was an investor and non-executive director[6] of Phonetic Arts, a speech generation company led by Paul Taylor. Phonetic Arts was acquired by Google in 2010,[7] for an undisclosed sum.
In May 2011, Braben announced a new prototype computer intended to stimulate the teaching of basic computer science in schools. Called Raspberry Pi, the computer is mounted in a package the size of a credit card, has a USB port on one end with a HDMI monitor socket on the other, and provides an ARM processor running Linux for an estimated price of about £15 for a configured system, cheap enough to give to a child to do whatever he or she wants with it.[8] The Raspberry Pi Foundation is a charity whose aim is to "promote the study of computer science and related topics, especially at school level, and to put the fun back into learning computing".[9]
Game development
Braben has been called "one of the most influential computer game programmers of all time", based on his early game development with the Elite series in the 1980s and 1990s.[10]Next Generation listed him in their "75 Most Important People in the Games Industry of 1995", chiefly due to the original Elite.[11]
Elite was developed in conjunction with programmer Ian Bell while both were undergraduate students at Cambridge University. Elite was first released in September 1984 and is known as the first game to have 3D hidden-line removal. In 1987, Braben published Zarch for the Acorn Archimedes, ported in 1988 as Virus for the Atari ST, Commodore Amiga, and PC.[12]
In 2006, Braben was working on an ambitious next-generation game called The Outsider, being developed by Frontier Developments. As said in an interview,[14] he was planning to start working on Elite 4 – as a space MMORPG game – as soon as The Outsider went gold. Braben said explicitly that this title was of special value to him. The Outsider was abandoned due to the removal of publisher support and was never published.
In 2012, Braben explained in an interview with developer website Gamasutra his opinion that the sale of secondhand games negatively affects the development of new titles, also holding the price of games in general much higher than they would otherwise be.[15] However, later in 2014 he acknowledged: "Piracy goes hand in hand with sales. If a game is pirated a lot, it will be bought a lot. People want a connected experience, so with pirated games we still have a route in to get them to upgrade to the real version. And even if someone's version is pirated, they might evangelise and their mates will buy the real thing."[16]
On 6 November 2012, Braben's Frontier Developments announced a new Elite sequel called Elite: Dangerous on the Kickstartercrowdfunding site.[17]Elite: Dangerous achieved its funding goal and was listed as one of the most funded Kickstarter campaigns.[18] The game was released on 16 December 2014, and by April 2015 had sold over 500,000 copies.[19] As of August 2017, the game has sold over 2.75 million copies.[20][21]
In August 2022, Frontier announced David’s transition to his new role of President and Founder, stepping down as CEO.
Personal life
In May 1993, he married Katharin Dickinson in Cambridge.[5] His current wife is Wendy Irvin-Braben, and he has two sons.[22] According to the Sunday Times Rich List in 2020, Braben and his wife have an estimated combined worth of £182 million, an increase of £50 million from the previous year.[23]
In 2013, Braben was co-award winner of Tech Personality of the Year at the UK Tech Awards 2013.[26] In the same year, he was awarded an honorary degree by Abertay University.[27]
In January 2015, he received the 2015 Pioneer, Game Developers Choice Award (GDCA), for his work on the Raspberry Pi and for working more than 30 years as a game developer.[30]
Braben is the recipient of three honorary doctorates from Abertay University (2013),[32] the Open University (2014),[33] and the University of York (15 July 2015).[34]
^Parkin, Simon (8 February 2017). "The life of Pi". New Statesman. Retrieved 31 October 2017. Braben, who attended Buckhurst Hill County High, a grammar school in Chigwell, Essex, was a natural programmer, talented at maths and physics.
^ ab"David Braben". The Centre for Computing History. Retrieved 7 May 2015.