A nice derangement of epitaphs

A great introduction to some of the reasons why I love studying the English language. From John McIntyre’s You Don’t Say. The malapropism: This venerable category of errors derives from the delicious and eponymous Mrs. Malaprop from Richard Brinsley Sheridan’s The Rivals of 1775. Mrs. Malaprop (from the French mal a propos) pretentiously and unknowingly…

EDSAC Source

On a listserv of which I’m a member, Jerome McDonough points out that Tennis for Two is an analog game, so not only does it not require a computer, the medium itself — an oscilloscope — is an analog, so the information being represented on the screen isn’t digital at all.  An even earlier game,…

What the Army Taught Me About Teaching

Every year, the Army recruits, at great expense, tens of thousands of young men and women. Given the costs of recruitment (and the dearth of eligible recruits), the Army cannot afford to lose many of these new soldiers. Army training is designed to take recruits who may know nothing about military life, discipline, or maneuvers,…

Language Log » Temporally speaking

One of my favorite things — a photograph of a mistake on a sign. From Language Log. Similar:Prototypes in Technical Writing: What are They?Many a high school student has muddled t…AcademiaVincent Connare, Inventor Of 'The Most Hated Font,' Defends HimselfA typographic engineer, Connare was work…AestheticsPersonality Profiles: Prize-Winning Student Journalism SamplesThe personality profile is a staple…

Evil Mad Scientist Laboratories – Resurrecting Tennis for Two, a video game from 1958

Modern recreation of the 1958 video game “Tennis for Two” (Evil Mad Scientist Laboratories) Similar:That story about the pope requiring Catholics to fast from meat as part of a deal with the… That story about the pope requiring Ca…BusinessUpdating a villain's lair in #Blender3D. Still a work in progress.AestheticsHide and Q (TNG Rewatch, Season 1,…

The joy of boredom

The Boston Globe: We are most human when we feel dull. Lolling around in a state of restlessness is one of life’s greatest luxuries — one not available to creatures that spend all their time pursuing mere survival. To be bored is to stop reacting to the external world, and to explore the internal one.…

Octopodes!

If the following line doesn’t get you reading The Steampunk Home, nothing will: I can think of two steampunk references to octopodes. Thanks for the link, Rosemary. Similar:Responding to Literature at the College LevelA new handout, based on the opening lect…AcademiaStar Trek: "Wink Of An Eye"/"The Empath"Amusing, if cynical, reaction to some of…AmusingThe Neutral Zone…

How to Write with Style

From a collection of writings by Kurt Vonnegut. Read the full text of the essay, which is summarized (by Vonnegut) as follows: 1. Find a subject you care about2. Do not ramble, though3. Keep it simple4. Have guts to cut5. Sound like yourself6. Say what you mean7. Pity the readers Similar:Time in AP Style: The…

iPhone news, Adventure, Pocket Gamer

I came across this brief article in Pocket Gamer. I don’t have an iPhone, so I can’t check out this version of the game.  The 1977 date for the Don Woods expansion is correct, but (“[s]ources that incorrectly date Crowther’s original to 1972 or 1974… are sourced thinly if at all. The new evidence establishes…

GameSetWatch – COLUMN: 'The Aberrant Gamer – Auto-Neurotic Asphyxiation'

Leigh Alexander makes some good points in this GameSetWatch article. Most lifetime gamers, then, have a built-in bias engine, whether they acknowledge it or not. For some, it’s much more conscious and overt – hence the “Fanboy” network of platform-specific sites, hence forum flamewars, hence almost frighteningly irrational ire over certain reviews. Most reviewers dread…