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:Proofreading matters.…

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

Via David Thompson Similar:Artificial StupidityThis article will whip your head around …CybercultureBooks vs. Kindles: The Choice No One Made Ever”I bought a Kindle. I didn’t immediately…BooksI can't really articulate why i enjoy crafting #steampunk control panels, but it's been a …AestheticsAcademics want to preserve video games. The game industry is fighting them in court.For decades,…

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

Twitter / Search – “couldn’t remove your contacts” – All Tweets. Similar:Amazon Staff Meetings: “No Powerpoint”I am not a big fan of traditional slide-…BusinessJournalism has become ground zero for the vocation crisis When scholars of journalism study the …BusinessDisability advocates: Don't drop COVID-19 safety measuresWith the lethal threat of COVID-19 on th…AcademiaThe new marshmallow test:…

My daughter likes Machinarium.

We finished the game over the weekend. Delightful. via My daughter likes Machinarium. – YouTube. Similar:The reception line begins. Grad2018PersonalCarolyn, Easter 2017 PersonalYellow Journalism Did Not Cause the Spanish-American War (Role of Sensationalized Headlin… When a correspondent sent to Cuba to c…AestheticsMuseum of Endangered SoundsImagine a world where we never again hea…AestheticsConfronting the Myth of the…

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,…