A very interesting and innovative storytelling game for two players.
How it works is that one player moves the "game" characters around a stage, selecting any object to interact with as he pleases. The other player is the "gamemaster", who determines how the selected object / character will interact with the "player". Each side takes 30 seconds per turn... which leads to very interesting results.
Very useful for making flipbooks, interactive real-time storytelling. This storytelling game helps to restore the ancient art of making up engaging stories in real-time, as you go along.
For an animated explanation of how the whole thing works: http://sleepisdeath.net/slideShow
For an example story (this one is about a 5-years-old boy during the atomic bombing of Hiroshima...): http://sidtube.com/gallery/168/
More stories: http://sleepisdeath.net/stories.php
Have fun exploring the stories! :)
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in [in] Show IPA preposition, adverb, adjective, noun, verb, inned, in·ning.
preposition
1.(used to indicate inclusion within space, a place, or limits): walking in the park.
2.(used to indicate inclusion within something abstract or immaterial): in politics; in the autumn.
3.(used to indicate inclusion within or occurrence during a period or limit of time): in ancient times; a task done in ten minutes.
4.(used to indicate limitation or qualification, as of situation, condition, relation, manner, action, etc.): to speak in a whisper; to be similar in appearance.
5.(used to indicate means): sketched in ink; spoken in French.
...refer to the......[br]
the1 [stressed thee; unstressed before a consonant thuh; unstressed before a vowel thee] Show IPA
definite article
1.(used, especially before a noun, with a specifying or particularizing effect, as opposed to the indefinite or generalizing force of the indefinite article a or an ): the book you gave me; Come into the house.
2.(used to mark a proper noun, natural phenomenon, ship, building, time, point of the compass, branch of endeavor, or field of study as something well-known or unique): the sun; the Alps; the Queen Elizabeth; the past; the West.
3.(used with or as part of a title): the Duke of Wellington; the Reverend john smith.
4.(used to mark a noun as indicating the best-known, most approved, most important, most satisfying, etc.): the skiing center of the U.S.; If you're going to work hard, now is the time.
5.(used to mark a noun as being used generically): The dog is a quadruped.
At Adobe’s MAX conference the other night, that message was made manifest with a live demonstration of a Flash to HTML5 conversion tool, which is currently in the works. The tool is incredibly impressive in that it can convert full Flash animation into HTML5 on the fly
Watch the demonstration video to get an idea of how users will be able to take elements from within the newly converted HTML5 code to re-insert elsewhere on a web page
Those animations or interactions will now be viewable on all kinds of devices — including the iPhone () and iPad. This is where we think that this HTML5 conversion tool has real possibilities. It’s one thing to be able to convert a movie or animation
Adobe might be serious about wanting to push Flash and Adobe Air () on mobile platforms like the BlackBerry PlayBook, HP’s webOS and Google’s () Android (), but that doesn’t mean that the company isn’t listening to its customers and providing cross-platform solutions that can work on the many different device types
This is a excellent source to know about HTML 5 which is created by World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) and the Web Hypertext Application Technology Working Group (WHATWG). The W3C site exlplain new features about HTML5, but bear in mind that HTML5 is still work in progress.
The latest versions of Safari, Chrome, Firefox, and Opera support some HTML5 features. Internet Explorer 9 will support some HTML5 features.
Overview comparison of browser supports for CSS3 properties and html 5.
Useful for considering which platform to build on and crossbrowsers issue and moble web apps performance.
California-based Katalabs has just released a free iPad and iPhone-friendly Web-based virtual world viewer, KataSpace, which works in conjunction with the open source Sirikata virtual world server software.
Styling HTML 5 is really no different than styling HTML 4. There are a bunch of new elements, but styling them is basically the same as styling any other element. They generate the same boxes as any other div, span, h2, a, or what have you.
The HTML 5 specification is still being worked on as of this writing, so this may change a bit over time, but the following declarations may be of use to older browsers that don’t know quite what to do with the new elements.
Business cards are an important part of life, helping us quickly swap contact
details and turn a brief meeting into a valuable long-term contact
The thing is, business cards are so 20th Century. There are now a
number of companies vying to replace them with far more tech savvy solutions. If
you’re tired of getting having to take a box of cards around wherever you go,
here are five solutions to try