MECC

The Minnesota Educational Computing Consortium (later Corporation), most commonly known as MECC, was an organization founded in 1973 best known for developing the edutainment video game series The Oregon Trail and its spin-offs.

In 1963, their presence inspired a group of teachers at the University of Minnesota College of Education's laboratory school to introduce computers into classrooms via teleprinters and time-sharing.

The presence of computer-company employees on many school boards accelerated TIES's expansion and helped make Minnesota a leader in computer-based education.

The University of Minnesota Computer Center (UCC as it was called then) rejected implementing MULTI due to concerns about system stability.

After doing test runs with several other Universities mail programs, two developers at UCC implemented their own version, which also contained a message board feature, and was the campus wide e-mail solution for a couple of years.

Through what InfoWorld described as an "enviable showcase" for its products Apple sold more than 2,000 computers during the next three years[13] and more than 5,000 by 1983,[12] making MECC the company's largest reseller.

MECC offered computer training to teachers and administrators, and 10 consortium consultants traveled throughout the state assisting school districts.

[15] As control over computer resources moved to local levels within Minnesota, MECC's focus on selling software grew.

[6] Beginning in 1980 with the Iowa Department of Education, 5,000 school districts around the world purchased site licenses for MECC software.

The game Freedom!, which had the player try to escape from slavery on the Underground Railroad, was released in 1992 but pulled from the market in 1993 following complaints from parents about its classroom use.

[1] Although MECC continued to develop software after its acquisition, including the successful Oregon Trail II in 1995, Softkey (then named The Learning Company) was acquired by Mattel in 1999 in what Businessweek called one of "the Worst Deals of All Time",[20] leading to the a great deal of financial repercussions that year including closing the MECC offices in Brooklyn Center, Minnesota in October 1999.

MECC logo circa 1978