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Garrett Eastman

Gamification - Coursera - 0 views

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    Date to be announced. Taught by Kevin Werbach, University of Pennsylvania. Description: "Gamification is the application of game elements and digital game design techniques to non-game problems, such as business and social impact challenges. This course will teach you the mechanisms of gamification, why it has such tremendous potential, and how to use it effectively.
Garrett Eastman

HTML5 Game Development - 0 views

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    "This course will walk you through the major components of building GRITS, an HTML5 game. We'll talk about how to take standard game development techniques, and use them to create high performance HTML5 applications."
Garrett Eastman

An Introduction to Interactive Programming in Python - 1 views

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    "This course is designed to be a fun introduction to the basics of programming in Python. Our main focus will be on building simple interactive games such as Pong, Blackjack and Asteroids."
Garrett Eastman

Teaching Games Development: Games Are More Important Than You Think They Are - 0 views

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    Reflections from a university games development instructor on both analog and online courses
Garrett Eastman

Scaling Online Collaborative Games to Urban Level - 0 views

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    Abstract: "With the growing availability of personal communication devices we are witnessing a tremendous increase in the demand for mobile services based on location and context. Mobile gaming is, of course, following this same trend. Unfortunately, differently from other services, location- and context-based gaming strictly requires near-field communication to interact with nearby players in order to create teams and arenas. Since currently adopted technologies suffer from scalability (Bluetooth) or energy (WiFi) constraints, Opportunistic Networks (ONs) have already been addressed as a viable solution to involve a considerable number of players on a wider area. While massive multiplayer games are commonplace on wired networks, it is not yet clear how player experience is affected by the increased delay and probabilistic message forwarding introduced by a huge population over an ON. In this paper we address this problem by proposing an opportunistic collaborative game, which is meaningful for the category of collaborative puzzle games, and evaluating its playability and scalability by means of simulations on a real city topology."
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