Bill Budge (born c. 1954) is an American video game programmer and designer. He is best known for the Apple II games Raster Blaster (1981) and Pinball Construction Set (1983).
Budge says he became interested in computers while obtaining a PhD at UC Berkeley. He purchased an Apple II and began writing games. He enjoyed it so much that he dropped out of school and became a game programmer. Budge's first game was a Pong clone, called Penny Arcade, which he wrote using his own custom graphics routines. He traded the completed game to Apple Computer for a Centronics printer. By 1981 his reputation was such that BYTE wrote in its review of Budge's Tranquility Base, a Lunar Lander clone, that "Consistently excellent graphics are a trademark of Bill Budge's games". Budge marketed his games commercially with a floppy disk drive salesman who traveled from store to store; he and the salesman agreed to split profits of selling his games 50/50. Budge was shocked when he got his first check for USD$7,000.
Dobro jutro ovo iznad nas je nebo
zna da bude kad je suncan dan
svetlo plavo, bistro, duboko i vedro
suncu staza, a zvezdama stan.
Dobrodosli ova pesma to su ptice
zatrepere kad je mesec pun
lete nebom i pevaju kada svice
perje, krila, kap duse i kljun.
Dobrodosli pozdravlja vas divlje cvece
sladak miris ima svaki cvet
strast i ljubav zuje pcele opijene