place

Meadowbrook Polo Club

1881 establishments in New York (state)Polo clubs in the United StatesSports in Long Island

The Meadowbrook Polo Club (originally styled as the "Meadow Brook Club"), located in Old Westbury, New York, is the oldest continuously operating polo club in the United States, first established in 1881.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Meadowbrook Polo Club (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors).

Meadowbrook Polo Club
Polo Drive, Town of Oyster Bay

Geographical coordinates (GPS) Address Nearby Places
placeShow on map

Wikipedia: Meadowbrook Polo ClubContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 40.8105798 ° E -73.5978714 °
placeShow on map

Address

Polo Drive
11545 Town of Oyster Bay
New York, United States
mapOpen on Google Maps

Share experience

Nearby Places

New York Institute of Technology Computer Graphics Lab

The Computer Graphics Lab is a computer lab located at the New York Institute of Technology (NYIT), founded by Alexander Schure. It was originally located at the "pink building" on the NYIT campus. It has played an important role in the history of computer graphics and animation, as founders of Pixar and Lucasfilm, including Turing Award winners Edwin Catmull and Patrick Hanrahan, began their research there. It is the birthplace of entirely 3D CGI films. The lab was initially founded to produce a short high-quality feature film with the project name of The Works. The feature, which was never completed, was a 90-minute feature that was to be the first entirely computer-generated CGI movie. Production mainly focused around DEC PDP and VAX machines. Many of the original CGL team now form the elite of the CG and computer world with members going on to Silicon Graphics, Microsoft, Cisco, NVIDIA and others, including Pixar president, co-founder and Turing laureate Ed Catmull, Pixar co-founder and Microsoft graphics fellow Alvy Ray Smith, Pixar co-founder Ralph Guggenheim, Walt Disney Animation Studios chief scientist Lance Williams, Netscape and Silicon Graphics founder Jim Clark, Tableau co-founder and Turing laureate Pat Hanrahan, Microsoft graphics fellow Jim Blinn, Thad Beier, Oscar and Bafta nominee Jacques Stroweis, Andrew Glassner, and Tom Brigham. Systems programmer Bruce Perens went on to co-found the Open Source Initiative. Researchers at the New York Institute of Technology Computer Graphics Lab created the tools that made entirely 3D CGI films possible. Among NYIT CG Lab's many innovations was an eight-bit paint system to ease computer animation. NYIT CG Lab was regarded as the top computer animation research and development group in the world during the late 70s and early 80s.