A Real Swinger

It probably only makes sense if you pay attention to Lego sets, but its made my kids and me all laugh. Similar:Thoughtful Gestures Sometimes Speak Louder than WordsShe ended up waiting out the light cycle…AmusingIncredible archer shows his speed-shooting skillsI know next to nothing about archery. Ac…AestheticsHaven (TNG Rewatch, Season 1, Episode 10) When a…

Passage: a Gamma256 video game by Jason Rohrer

Grand Text Auto introduced me to the excellent indie mini-game Passage.  Play it. It takes a few minutes to download and about 5 minutes to play. I’m misty-eyed. Play it! Similar:How Literature Became Word Perfect There can be no true distinction drawn …CybercultureOkay, please stop droolingIt perfectly pulls together four importa…CybercultureThere are two factions working…

Retro Sabotage – True Self

Retro Sabotage remixes Pac-Man.  Lots more where that came from. Via MetaFilter. Similar:Burgh to Burg, episode 2.AcademiaApple’s new diverse emoji are even more problematic than beforeThis author did a great job articulating…Aesthetics"Know that I glory in this nose of mine."Was browsing YouTube for a few of my fav…AestheticsThesis Reminders and Transitions: Touched up and created…

Star Trek – Video Episodes on CBS.com

CBS makes up for canceling Star Trek almost 40 years ago, by publishing the full video of every episode on their website. (Sigh. Yet another cool thing I won’t have time for.) Similar:How Literature Became Word Perfect There can be no true distinction drawn …CybercultureEvery few years, I Google the name of the kid who…

Aardvarchaeology : Ruins of Childhood

Aardvarchaeology has a fascinating piece on abandoned suburban treehouses. These sites and their formation processes reflect children’s psychological characteristics. Kids have little sense of order, short memories and strange rationality. They also have no idea that childhood is brief and transient. They will happily fill their treehouses with junk without any thought that they might…

Short Story of the Day

American Literature.com The Short Story of the Day features works by Anton Chekhov, Jack London, Louisa May Alcott, H.H. Munro (SAKI), Guy de Maupassant, Charles Dickens, Edgar Allen Poe, Nathaniel Hawthorne, O. Henry, Ambrose Bierce, and many others. An archive of all the stories featured to date can be found here. Similar:Short Reports: How To…

Up Right Down # 1

Up Right Down already features over a dozen versions of the same story. What’s yours? (Via) THE PLOT: In a bistro in Paris a young woman (A) tells her three girlfriends (B, C, and D) about the affair she had with an American tourist, who returned home promising to write, and hasn’t. It’s been over…

Paths to Publication

A great series hosted by Heidi Ruby Miller, a recent graduate of Seton Hill’s Writing Popular Fiction program. She has asked writers of genre fiction (fantasy, crime, etc.) to tell the story of their first publication. I’m just starting a career track unit in Introduction to Literary Study, and several of the students want to…

Seton Hill University – Google Maps

I just noticed that Google Maps has added Greensburg to its street view service. How long has this been available?  Here’s a look up Seton Hill’s lovely sycamore-lined driveway.View Larger Map Similar:On Her One Free Day Between Two Shows…[View the story “On Her One Free Day Bet…DesignI'm just getting around to watching this speech from…

Emergent Puzzle Solutions

Interactive fiction author Emily Short offers a thoughtful analysis of the function of designing puzzles that permit the player to come up with original solutions. She refers to her game Metamorphoses, which includes a complex physical world model that includes such concepts as size, shape, weight, etc.  For instance, you can beat down a door…

St. Valentine's Day Gifts

From the University of Toronto’s Representative Poetry Online: “Poems to be memorized and spoken to your sweetheart.” They came to tell your faults to me, They named them over one by one; I laughed aloud when they were done, I knew them all so well before, — Oh, they were blind, too blind to see…