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{{Era|Tron|Tron20|GITM|TB|TE|TR2N|Flynn}}
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[[File:Encom inter logo.png|thumb|ENCOM logo]]
 
[[File:Encom inter logo.png|thumb|ENCOM logo]]
'''ENCOM''' is an American multi-national computer technology corporation that developed many important programs and technologies such as [[digitization]] hardware and software, the [[MCP]] and [[Tron]]. In the 1980s ENCOM was mainly focusing on defense systems, but quickly began focusing more on video games after the amazing success and profits produced by games such as [[Space Paranoids]] and [[Lightcycles (game)|Light Cycles.]] The company is headquartered in Center City.
+
'''ENCOM''' is an American multi-national computer technology corporation that developed many important programs and technologies such as [[digitization]] hardware and software, the [[MCP]], and [[Tron]]. In the 1980s ENCOM was mainly focusing on defense systems, but quickly began focusing more on video games after the amazing success of games such as [[Space Paranoids]] and [[Lightcycles (game)|Light Cycles.]] The company is headquartered in Los Angeles, CA.
   
 
== History ==
 
== History ==
Line 16: Line 8:
 
ENCOM was founded by [[Walter Gibbs|Dr. Walter Gibbs, Ph.D.]] on July 22, 1972, originally from inside his garage. Within less than ten years, ENCOM grew into one of the world's leading computer companies.
 
ENCOM was founded by [[Walter Gibbs|Dr. Walter Gibbs, Ph.D.]] on July 22, 1972, originally from inside his garage. Within less than ten years, ENCOM grew into one of the world's leading computer companies.
   
In 1979, lead software engineer [[Kevin Flynn]] privately developed a set of five video games, including Space Paranoids and Matrix Blaster, while working nightshifts at ENCOM's offices. Before he could present the games to the company, however, another programmer, [[Ed Dillinger]], hacked into Flynn's private memory file and stole the games. Three months later, Dillinger presented the games to executives at ENCOM; the games became a massive success and Dillinger was promoted, eventually rising to Senior Executive VP. Flynn was then fired by Dillinger after disputes over credit for his work.
+
In 1979, lead software engineer [[Kevin Flynn]] privately developed a set of five video games, including Space Paranoids and Matrix Blaster, while working nights-shifts at his office. Before he could present the games to the company, however, another programmer, [[Ed Dillinger]], hacked into Flynn's private files and stole the games. Three months later, Dillinger presented the games to the executives at ENCOM; the games became a massive success and Dillinger was promoted, eventually rising to Senior Executive VP. Flynn was then fired by Dillinger after disputes over credit for his work.
   
ENCOM brought its first mainframe online in 1980. It was a significant breakthrough in processing power and chip-to-chip communication. Dillinger created an administrative program to control this mainframe. Its name was the Master Control Program, or "MCP". Development of MCP began as a chess program dating back to when Flynn was first with the company.
+
ENCOM brought [[ENCOM Mainframe|its first mainframe]] online in 1980. It was a significant breakthrough in processing power and chip-to-chip communication. Dillinger created an administrative program to control this mainframe. Its name was the Master Control Program, or "MCP". Development of MCP began as a chess program dating back to when Flynn was first with the company.
   
 
[[Image:Encomcopter.jpg|thumb|200px|Company helicopter.]]
 
[[Image:Encomcopter.jpg|thumb|200px|Company helicopter.]]
Line 25: Line 17:
 
Dillinger's MCP, however, was becoming self-aware and unsatisfied with the limitations of controlling just the ENCOM mainframe. It began hacking into outside systems and assuming the functions of the programs it found there. Still bored, and much to Dillinger's chagrin, it began making plans to hack into the Pentagon and Kremlin systems to take control of the world's two largest defense systems. Doing so would essentially have given MCP control over the world, which MCP justified by explaining it could run the systems more efficiently than people. Dillinger objected, but MCP was able to control him by threatening to expose his theft of Flynn's game programs.
 
Dillinger's MCP, however, was becoming self-aware and unsatisfied with the limitations of controlling just the ENCOM mainframe. It began hacking into outside systems and assuming the functions of the programs it found there. Still bored, and much to Dillinger's chagrin, it began making plans to hack into the Pentagon and Kremlin systems to take control of the world's two largest defense systems. Doing so would essentially have given MCP control over the world, which MCP justified by explaining it could run the systems more efficiently than people. Dillinger objected, but MCP was able to control him by threatening to expose his theft of Flynn's game programs.
   
Despite being let go from the company, Flynn continued his search for proof that he created the video games that earned ENCOM so much money. Flynn started his own business, a video arcade, from which he hacked into the ENCOM mainframe in search of code fragments he could reconstruct, such as his original password or Dillinger's order to redirect the data. MCP was able to shut Flynn out of the system, further frustrating the young programmer. On Sept. 22, 1982, Flynn, with the help of ENCOM programmer Alan Bradley and researcher Lora Baines, was able to disable the MCP and finally uncover the missing data, leading to Dillinger's dismissal and giving Flynn enough leverage to assume control of the company and become CEO.
+
Despite being let go from the company, Flynn continued his search for proof that he created the video games that earned ENCOM so much money. Flynn started his own business, a video arcade, from which he hacked into the ENCOM mainframe in search of code fragments he could reconstruct, such as his original password or Dillinger's order to redirect the data. MCP was able to shut Flynn out of the system, further frustrating the young programmer. On September 22, 1982, Flynn, with the help of ENCOM programmer [[Alan Bradley]] and researcher Lora Baines, was able to disable the MCP and finally uncover the missing data, leading to Dillinger's dismissal and giving Flynn enough leverage to assume control of the company and become CEO.
   
Soon after, Flynn introduced a new video game, called "[[TRON (arcade game)|TRON]]," which was accompanied by a successful toy line. TRON and Space Paranoids became the bestselling video games in history.
+
Soon after, Flynn introduced a new video game, called "[[TRON (arcade game)|TRON]]," which was accompanied by a successful toy line. Soon after, TRON and Space Paranoids would became the bestselling video games in history.
   
In 1985, Flynn's wife died, and those closest to him noted a change in his personality, which was described as more erratic. Flynn began to push his theories of a new digital frontier that could be used to "reshape the human condition." Flynn expounded on his ideas in a book, called "[[Digital Frontier]]," and in a famous speech about computers declared that, "In there is a new world! In there is our future! In there... is our destiny."
+
In 1985, Flynn's wife died in the car accident and those closest to him noted a change in his personality, which was described as more erratic. Flynn began to push his theories of a new digital frontier that could be used to "reshape the human condition." Flynn expounded on his ideas in a book, called "[[Digital Frontier]]," and in a famous speech about computers declared that, "In there is a new world! In there is our future! In there...is our destiny."
   
Among Flynn's initiatives was a program to develop and distribute software such as operating systems openly without concern for profit.
+
Among Flynn's initiatives was to develop and distribute software such as operating systems openly without concern for profit.
   
Sometime in 1989, Flynn told those closest to him that he had made a breakthrough in computing that could impact science, medicine, religion and more. A few days later, Flynn mysteriously disappeared and as a result many feared that ENCOM would go out of business now that their creative guru was gone. Bradley assumed the mantle of interim CEO but the company began to lose ground in the software field to Dillinger Systems, a company formed by Flynn's old rival.
+
Sometime in 1989, Flynn told those closest to him that he had made a breakthrough in computing that could impact science, medicine, religion, and more. A few days later, Flynn disappeared without a trace and as a result, many feared that ENCOM would go out of business now that their creative guru was gone. Bradley assumed the mantle of interim CEO, but the company began to lose ground in the software field to Dillinger Systems, a company formed by Flynn's old rival.
   
In the early 1990s, rumblings from ENCOM stockholders led to the board forcing Bradley to step down, though he remained on the board. Though Bradley insisted Flynn would one day return, the rest of the board decided to move on without him and sought to return to profitability. As part of this initiative, ENCOM laid off several of its most experienced programmers and other personnel.
+
In the early 1990s, rumblings from ENCOM stockholders led to the board to force Bradley to step down, though he remained on the board as one of its executives. Though Bradley insisted Flynn would one day return, the rest of the board decided to move on without him and sought to return to profitability. As part of this initiative, ENCOM laid off several of its most experienced programmers and other personnel, including [[Roy Kleinberg]].
   
The perceived abandonment of Kevin Flynn's ideals angered some of his most ardent followers, who began an [[Flynn Lives Organization|underground movement]] to keep his memory alive. The efforts culminated in 1998 with the release of an Internet virus that crashed 40 million computers.
+
The perceived abandonment of Kevin Flynn's ideals angered some of his most ardent followers, who began an underground movement called [[Flynn Lives]] to keep his memory alive. The efforts culminated in 1998 with the release of an Internet virus that crashed 40 million computers.
   
In the 2000s Richard Mackey became chairman of the board, and by 2010 ENCOM had experienced its most profitable year ever. However, Flynn's son, [[Sam Flynn|Sam]], remained a majority stockholder in the company, and while he stayed out of ENCOM's day-to-day activities and publicly professed to not concern himself with its operations, once a year Sam would stage an elaborate stunt to embarrass the company's executives.
+
In the 2000s, Richard Mackey became chairman of the board and by 2010, ENCOM had experienced its most profitable year ever. However, Flynn's son [[Sam Flynn|Sam]] remained as ENCOM's primary shareholder and while he stayed out of ENCOM's day-to-day activities and publicly professed to not concern himself with its operations, once a year he would stage an elaborate stunt to embarrass the company's executives.
   
This all changed in 2010 when Sam decided to reassert control over the company, fired Mackey and installed Bradley as chairman with the intention of returning the company to the ideals established by Kevin Flynn.
+
This all changed in 2010 when Sam decided to reassert control over the company, fired Mackey, and installed Bradley as chairman, enabling the company to return to the ideals that were practiced under Kevin Flynn's leadership.
   
 
== TRON ==
 
== TRON ==
In 1982, ENCOM was under the control of senior EVP Ed Dillinger, and was developing multiple computer [[program]]s, and most importantly, digitising technology. However, Ed Dillinger was soon displaced from his position once Kevin Flynn acquired proof that it was he, and not Dillinger, who had developed five video games that earned millions of dollars in profit for the company.
+
In 1982, ENCOM was under the control of senior VP Ed Dillinger and was developing multiple computer [[program|programs]], the most important of which was digitizing technology. However, Dillinger was eventually fired from his position once Kevin Flynn acquired proof that it was he, and not Dillinger, who had developed five video games that earned millions of dollars in profit for the company.
   
 
== TRON 2.0 ==
 
== TRON 2.0 ==
Line 53: Line 45:
 
== TRON: Legacy ==
 
== TRON: Legacy ==
 
[[File:EncomBoard.png|thumb|270px|The board of directors in 2010]]
 
[[File:EncomBoard.png|thumb|270px|The board of directors in 2010]]
  +
By the 21st century, ENCOM had become one of the largest tech companies in the world, albeit at the expense of Flynn's ideals. As a result, its incumbent leadership had very little regard for innovation and only cared about expanding their profits, leading them to eliminate the idea of distributing ENCOM's flagship operating system to the public for free. By 2010, Alan was the only executive left in the entire company who was still loyal to Flynn's ideology and by that point, he'd long given up on trying to steer ENCOM back towards how the company was back when Flynn was still in charge.
By 2010, ENCOM had developed into the world's largest video game company, under the control of [[Alan Bradley]]. ENCOM was also into heavily merchandising its games (such as Recognizer night-lights and action figures); this enabled ENCOM to be incredibly popular. The board of directors took control of the company after the disappearance of Kevin Flynn. [[Richard Mackey]] took over as the new ENCOM CEO, and he and the rest of the board quickly eliminated the idea of sharing their operating system with others. Since then the company moved into the operating system market, releasing FLYNN/ENCOM OS 12 by 2010. But, after returning from the Tron system, Sam Flynn took back the company, and Richard Mackey was reported to be fired from his position.
 
   
  +
The year 2010 marked the most profitable fiscal year in all of its ENCOM's history. ENCOM OS-12 was also meant to be put for sale online with a heavy price tag on it, but on the night of its launch, Sam executed his annual prank on the company by hacking into the company's servers and uploading the operating system onto the internet for free. At the same time, he replaced the program on ENCOM's website with a looped video of his dog [[Marv]], preventing ENCOM's executives from shutting it down before ENCOM OS-12 was leaked online. Later that same month, after returning from the Tron system, Sam decided to finally take back control of the company by firing most of the board, including its chairman [[Richard Mackey]], and appointing Alan as his replacement with the intention of returning ENCOM to the ideals established by his father.
==Other mentions==
 
  +
  +
== ENCOM In Other Media ==
 
ENCOM is briefly mentioned as the developers of ''[[TRON]]'' in ''[[Kingdom Hearts II]]''.
 
ENCOM is briefly mentioned as the developers of ''[[TRON]]'' in ''[[Kingdom Hearts II]]''.
   
There is an ENCOM advertisement on a bus-stop bench in the episode [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Welcome_to_Storybrooke "Welcome to Storybrooke"] of the TV show ''[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Once_Upon_a_Time_(TV_series) Once Upon a Time] . ''Interestingly, the father in that episode is named "Kurt Flynn." an obvious nod to Kevin Flynn. This also suggests that both Fairy Tale characters and ''[[TRON]]''  are living in the same universe.
+
There is an ENCOM advertisement on a 1983 bus-stop bench in the episode [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Welcome_to_Storybrooke "Welcome to Storybrooke"] of the TV show ''[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Once_Upon_a_Time_(TV_series) Once Upon a Time] . ''Interestingly, the father in that episode is named "Kurt Flynn," an obvious nod to Kevin Flynn. This also suggests that both Fairy Tale characters and ''[[TRON]]''  are living in the same universe.
  +
[[Category:ENCOM]]
 
  +
[[Wikipedia:Gorillaz|Gorillaz]] drummer [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Russel_Hobbs Russel Hobbs] can be seen wearing a hat with the ENCOM logo during the music video for "[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Feel_Good_Inc. Feel Good Inc]".
[[Category:TRON Universe]]
 
[[Category:TRON]]
 
[[Category:TRON: Legacy]]
 
[[Category:TRON: Betrayal]]
 
[[Category:TRON 2.0]]
 
[[Category:TRON: The Ghost in the Machine]]
 
[[Category:Canon]]
 
[[Category:In-Universe Companies]]
 
   
==Notes and references==
+
== Notes and references ==
 
"Past." ''Encom International''. Disney, 2010. Web. 03 Aug. 2010. http://www.encominternational.com/past.htm
 
"Past." ''Encom International''. Disney, 2010. Web. 03 Aug. 2010. http://www.encominternational.com/past.htm
   
[[es:ENCOM]]
+
[[Category:ENCOM| ]]
[[Category:ENCOM]]
 
 
[[Category:TRON Universe]]
 
[[Category:TRON Universe]]
 
[[Category:TRON]]
 
[[Category:TRON]]
Line 82: Line 68:
 
[[Category:Canon]]
 
[[Category:Canon]]
 
[[Category:In-Universe Companies]]
 
[[Category:In-Universe Companies]]
  +
  +
[[de:Enkom]]
 
[[es:ENCOM]]
 
[[ru:ENCOM]]

Latest revision as of 14:45, 1 October 2023

Encom inter logo

ENCOM logo

ENCOM is an American multi-national computer technology corporation that developed many important programs and technologies such as digitization hardware and software, the MCP, and Tron. In the 1980s ENCOM was mainly focusing on defense systems, but quickly began focusing more on video games after the amazing success of games such as Space Paranoids and Light Cycles. The company is headquartered in Los Angeles, CA.

History[]

Encom front

ENCOM's main offices in the mid-1980s.

ENCOM was founded by Dr. Walter Gibbs, Ph.D. on July 22, 1972, originally from inside his garage. Within less than ten years, ENCOM grew into one of the world's leading computer companies.

In 1979, lead software engineer Kevin Flynn privately developed a set of five video games, including Space Paranoids and Matrix Blaster, while working nights-shifts at his office. Before he could present the games to the company, however, another programmer, Ed Dillinger, hacked into Flynn's private files and stole the games. Three months later, Dillinger presented the games to the executives at ENCOM; the games became a massive success and Dillinger was promoted, eventually rising to Senior Executive VP. Flynn was then fired by Dillinger after disputes over credit for his work.

ENCOM brought its first mainframe online in 1980. It was a significant breakthrough in processing power and chip-to-chip communication. Dillinger created an administrative program to control this mainframe. Its name was the Master Control Program, or "MCP". Development of MCP began as a chess program dating back to when Flynn was first with the company.

Encomcopter

Company helicopter.

By 1982, ENCOM was operating in 30 different countries and was a leading research facility. One particular breakthrough involved the disintegration and reintegration of matter using a laser beam.

Dillinger's MCP, however, was becoming self-aware and unsatisfied with the limitations of controlling just the ENCOM mainframe. It began hacking into outside systems and assuming the functions of the programs it found there. Still bored, and much to Dillinger's chagrin, it began making plans to hack into the Pentagon and Kremlin systems to take control of the world's two largest defense systems. Doing so would essentially have given MCP control over the world, which MCP justified by explaining it could run the systems more efficiently than people. Dillinger objected, but MCP was able to control him by threatening to expose his theft of Flynn's game programs.

Despite being let go from the company, Flynn continued his search for proof that he created the video games that earned ENCOM so much money. Flynn started his own business, a video arcade, from which he hacked into the ENCOM mainframe in search of code fragments he could reconstruct, such as his original password or Dillinger's order to redirect the data. MCP was able to shut Flynn out of the system, further frustrating the young programmer. On September 22, 1982, Flynn, with the help of ENCOM programmer Alan Bradley and researcher Lora Baines, was able to disable the MCP and finally uncover the missing data, leading to Dillinger's dismissal and giving Flynn enough leverage to assume control of the company and become CEO.

Soon after, Flynn introduced a new video game, called "TRON," which was accompanied by a successful toy line. Soon after, TRON and Space Paranoids would became the bestselling video games in history.

In 1985, Flynn's wife died in the car accident and those closest to him noted a change in his personality, which was described as more erratic. Flynn began to push his theories of a new digital frontier that could be used to "reshape the human condition." Flynn expounded on his ideas in a book, called "Digital Frontier," and in a famous speech about computers declared that, "In there is a new world! In there is our future! In there...is our destiny."

Among Flynn's initiatives was to develop and distribute software such as operating systems openly without concern for profit.

Sometime in 1989, Flynn told those closest to him that he had made a breakthrough in computing that could impact science, medicine, religion, and more. A few days later, Flynn disappeared without a trace and as a result, many feared that ENCOM would go out of business now that their creative guru was gone. Bradley assumed the mantle of interim CEO, but the company began to lose ground in the software field to Dillinger Systems, a company formed by Flynn's old rival.

In the early 1990s, rumblings from ENCOM stockholders led to the board to force Bradley to step down, though he remained on the board as one of its executives. Though Bradley insisted Flynn would one day return, the rest of the board decided to move on without him and sought to return to profitability. As part of this initiative, ENCOM laid off several of its most experienced programmers and other personnel, including Roy Kleinberg.

The perceived abandonment of Kevin Flynn's ideals angered some of his most ardent followers, who began an underground movement called Flynn Lives to keep his memory alive. The efforts culminated in 1998 with the release of an Internet virus that crashed 40 million computers.

In the 2000s, Richard Mackey became chairman of the board and by 2010, ENCOM had experienced its most profitable year ever. However, Flynn's son Sam remained as ENCOM's primary shareholder and while he stayed out of ENCOM's day-to-day activities and publicly professed to not concern himself with its operations, once a year he would stage an elaborate stunt to embarrass the company's executives.

This all changed in 2010 when Sam decided to reassert control over the company, fired Mackey, and installed Bradley as chairman, enabling the company to return to the ideals that were practiced under Kevin Flynn's leadership.

TRON[]

In 1982, ENCOM was under the control of senior VP Ed Dillinger and was developing multiple computer programs, the most important of which was digitizing technology. However, Dillinger was eventually fired from his position once Kevin Flynn acquired proof that it was he, and not Dillinger, who had developed five video games that earned millions of dollars in profit for the company.

TRON 2.0[]

In TRON 2.0, ENCOM was in the process of a hostile takeover by FCon in 2003, with its technology being seized and taken over for profit by FCON, but this led to ENCOM scientists being unaware of the corruption spreading throughout the computer world. This problem was soon stopped by a digitized Jet Bradley.

TRON: Legacy[]

EncomBoard

The board of directors in 2010

By the 21st century, ENCOM had become one of the largest tech companies in the world, albeit at the expense of Flynn's ideals. As a result, its incumbent leadership had very little regard for innovation and only cared about expanding their profits, leading them to eliminate the idea of distributing ENCOM's flagship operating system to the public for free. By 2010, Alan was the only executive left in the entire company who was still loyal to Flynn's ideology and by that point, he'd long given up on trying to steer ENCOM back towards how the company was back when Flynn was still in charge.

The year 2010 marked the most profitable fiscal year in all of its ENCOM's history. ENCOM OS-12 was also meant to be put for sale online with a heavy price tag on it, but on the night of its launch, Sam executed his annual prank on the company by hacking into the company's servers and uploading the operating system onto the internet for free. At the same time, he replaced the program on ENCOM's website with a looped video of his dog Marv, preventing ENCOM's executives from shutting it down before ENCOM OS-12 was leaked online. Later that same month, after returning from the Tron system, Sam decided to finally take back control of the company by firing most of the board, including its chairman Richard Mackey, and appointing Alan as his replacement with the intention of returning ENCOM to the ideals established by his father.

ENCOM In Other Media[]

ENCOM is briefly mentioned as the developers of TRON in Kingdom Hearts II.

There is an ENCOM advertisement on a 1983 bus-stop bench in the episode "Welcome to Storybrooke" of the TV show Once Upon a TimeInterestingly, the father in that episode is named "Kurt Flynn," an obvious nod to Kevin Flynn. This also suggests that both Fairy Tale characters and TRON  are living in the same universe.

Gorillaz drummer Russel Hobbs can be seen wearing a hat with the ENCOM logo during the music video for "Feel Good Inc".

Notes and references[]

"Past." Encom International. Disney, 2010. Web. 03 Aug. 2010. http://www.encominternational.com/past.htm