Gamasutra – News – Second Life developer acquires experimental game studio LittleTextPeople

LittleTextPeople, founded by writer Emily Short and Maxis veteran Richard Evans, has so far focused on the development of software that replicates complex social interaction. For instance, among its internal technology is a simulator that models social behavior and individual personalities. —Gamasutra – News – Second Life developer acquires experimental game studio LittleTextPeople. Similar:CNN Reports…

You are standing in a field. There is a meme here.

Via David Thompson Similar:CNN Profiles Former White House "Chief Calligrapher"Today was the last day of the manuscript…AestheticsIn praise of the sci-fi corridorCorridors in science-fiction movies. I l…AestheticsNo interior yet. Getting there. Gotta start somewhere. Low-poly background detail for a me…No interior yet. Getting there. Gotta st…AestheticsSyllabusing Like a BossAcademiaAnother delightful section of #neovictorian #steampunk control…

Twitter / Search – “couldn’t remove your contacts” – All Tweets

Twitter / Search – “couldn’t remove your contacts” – All Tweets. Similar:Rethinking TV news, Part III: First, kill the stand-upI’ve told my journalism students that TV…DesignIs your child texting about recursive acronym palindromes? Is your child texting about recursive …AmusingDozens of Plagiarism Incidents Are Reported in Coursera's Free Online Courses”If we really are trying to…

My daughter likes Machinarium.

We finished the game over the weekend. Delightful. via My daughter likes Machinarium. – YouTube. Similar:Rehearsal Rabbi-CamThis weekend, I will be playing the rabb…CultureCarolyn choreographed a fight-dance adaptation of Romeo and Juliet.PersonalEverybody Dies (Shakespearean Tragedy Infographic) The image (by Magee and Griffin) is an…AestheticsCrash site and Tower of Voices. Well worth the side trip on…

The heroine’s journey

Near the end of a review of a time-management game, Emily Short offers some fairly brilliant narratological observations. A Little Princess and Jane Eyre — and buckets of other classic and semi-classic literature for young women — revolve around the idea of patient, perennial self-sacrifice and obedience as a way of life, with the hope that one day,…