Oculus Rift Developer Killed, A Bystander During a Police Chase
Posted by Kotaku Jun 01 2013 05:08 GMT in Gaming News
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Andrew Scott Reisse, an accomplished developer at Oculus VR, the company behind the virtual-reality Oculus Rift headset, was killed in Santa Ana, California on Thursday. He was an innocent victim of a police chase gone horribly wrong. Reisse was apparently out for a walk when an alleged gang member, fleeing the police in a Dodge Charger, allegedly barreled into the intersection of Flower Street and MacArthur Boulevard, hitting and killing the 33-year-old developer. The driver may face murder charges, according to ABC News. Oculus CEO Brenden Iribe and chief software architect Michael Antonov issued the following statement to Kotaku about Reisse on behalf of all of their company : Andrew was a brilliant computer graphics engineer, an avid photographer and hiker who loved nature, a true loyal friend, and a founding member of our close-knit Oculus family. Some of us have known Andrew since college, and have worked with him at multiple companies beginning with Scaleform in Maryland which he helped start at age 19, then at Gaikai in Aliso Viejo which brought him out to California, and finally at Oculus where he was a co-founder and lead engineer. Andrew's contributions span far and wide in the video game industry. His code is embedded in thousands of games played by millions of people around the world. Words can not express how sorely he will be missed or how deeply our sympathy runs for his family Andrew will always be in our thoughts and will never be forgotten. We love you Reisse. We at Kotaku would also like to wish our condolences to Reisse's family and friends. To contact the author of this post, write to stephentotilo@kotaku.com or find him on Twitter @stephentotilo.

Replies:

WHAT THE *CRAG* WHERE DID THIS SHIT COME FROM ITS 5 IN THE GOD DAMN MORNING
Reply by Super-Claus Jun 01 2013 09:23 GMT
This is why we can't have nice things. The obvious thing to do here is push for the government to ban automobiles to prevent this kind of thing from happening again.
Reply by MM Jun 02 2013 13:05 GMT
no MeowMixer, the obvious thing to do is to *require* automobiles. One should never leave their home without first wrapping themselves with 2 tons of fast moving metal. Dodge is helping draft the bill right now, called the "Soft Flesh Safety Act" to end further tragedies like this.
Reply by Francis Jun 02 2013 14:12 GMT
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