Skip to main content

Home/ Groups/ Interactive Media
Jeremy Latour

The Colbert Report - Scrabble allows proper names - 2 views

  •  
    A funny story about rules introduced in the newest version of Scrabble. He touches on some of the same stuff we've been talking about.
Jeremy Latour

TIME 100: Jean Piaget - 1 views

  •  
    Seymour Papert's profile of Jean Piaget. Thought it illustrated some nice crossovers among our various readings.
russellgoldenberg

Less Talk More Rock - 1 views

  •  
    Awesome little article / manifesto on game design.
Jeremy Latour

Monopoly Killer: Perfect German Board Game Redefines Genre - 1 views

  •  
    An analysis of German style boardgames, and the implications they have on gameplay in general.
  •  
    The "long" version of this game is one of our absolute favorites. Try to play it sometime if you have time. I can loan it to you if you like...
Richard Smyth

The Majestic Game, Interactive Media Environments, and a New Turing Test: Blurring the ... - 0 views

  •  
    by Damian Ward Hey
  •  
    I read about this in Henry Jenkins' "Game Design as Narrative Architecture" in FIRST PERSON.
Richard Smyth

Holy Scrollers! - Boston Phoenix - 0 views

  •  
    on sales of e-Bibles
Richard Smyth

Does the Brain Like E-Books? - Room for Debate Blog - NYTimes.com - 1 views

  •  
    this is just the topic we were discussing last night! Also -- scroll down to see commentary by Maryanne Wolf, whom I quote in one of my PowerPoint introductions.
Jeremy Latour

Teaching computers how to forget. - 0 views

  •  
    Computers have turned "remembering" into a default state, but one professor argues that this has horrible consequences-and he has a proposal for training machines how to forget.
Richard Smyth

A new era for video games - The Boston Globe - 4 views

  •  
    This article mentions an example of a "persuasive game"
Richard Smyth

Deconstructing 'You've Got Blog' (book version; Joe Clark: fawny.org) - 0 views

  • A blog is a form of exteriorized psychology. It’s a part of you, or of your psyche; while a titanium hip joint or a pacemaker might bring technology inside the corporeal you, a Weblog uses technology to bring the psychological you outside of it. Your Weblog acts as a new limb, a new mouth, and a new hemisphere of the brain. Once those new organs come into being, you’re no more likely to remove or amputate them than the original organic equipment they augment. I continue to write Weblogs – not for money, not for renown, not for anyone but myself.
    • Richard Smyth
       
      This sounds so much like Ulmer's presentation of technology as a "prosthesis" for a "natural or organic human potential."
  • A blog is a form of exteriorized psychology. It’s a part of you, or of your psyche; while a titanium hip joint or a pacemaker might bring technology inside the corporeal you, a Weblog uses technology to bring the psychological you outside of it. Your Weblog acts as a new limb, a new mouth, and a new hemisphere of the brain. Once those new organs come into being, you’re no more likely to remove or amputate them than the original organic equipment they augment. I continue to write Weblogs – not for money, not for renown, not for anyone but myself.
  • A blog is a form of exteriorized psychology. It’s a part of you, or of your psyche; while a titanium hip joint or a pacemaker might bring technology inside the corporeal you, a Weblog uses technology to bring the psychological you outside of it. Your Weblog acts as a new limb, a new mouth, and a new hemisphere of the brain. Once those new organs come into being, you’re no more likely to remove or amputate them than the original organic equipment they augment. I continue to write Weblogs – not for money, not for renown, not for anyone but myself.
Richard Smyth

BBC News - Video game success may be in the mind, study finds - 0 views

  •  
    a good argument for buying an XBOX or Wii?!!!
Richard Smyth

Sven Birkerts: The Gutenberg Elegies - 0 views

  • To him [Havelock] the basic shift from oral to literate culture was a slow process; for centuries, despite the existence of writing, Greece remained essentially an oral culture. This culture was one which depended heavily on the encoding of information in poetic texts, to be learned by rote and to provide a cultural encyclopedia of conduct. It was not until the age of Plato in the fourth century that the dominance of poetry in an oral culture was challenged in the final triumph of literacy. That challenge came in the form of philosophy, among other things, and poetry has never recovered its cultural primacy. What oral poetry was for the Greeks, printed books in general are for us. But our historical moment, which we might call "proto-electronic," will not require a transition period of two centuries. The very essence of electronic transmissions is to surmount impedances and to hasten transitions. Fifty years, I'm sure, will suffice.
    • Richard Smyth
       
      Notice the Ulmer-like analogy comparing oral poetry to books...Also the note of how long these transitions can take....
Richard Smyth

Arthouse Games - interview with Jonathan Blow - 0 views

  • Invisible Cities had a lot of themes that I felt were in the same mode of thought as my ideas for Braid: physical spaces as metaphors for mental spaces
    • Richard Smyth
       
      spatial metaphors of mental phenomenon: allegory!
« First ‹ Previous 181 - 200 of 200
Showing 20 items per page