The Sunday Poem: Science Homework

 Posted by (Visited 5366 times)  The Sunday Poem  Tagged with:
Mar 162008
 

My daughter has a science project she has to do. It involved testing various substances to see whether they were acid or base, using a stinky cabbage juice concoction. We did the experiments on the kitchen table this evening…

Science Homework

Cabbage juice and acid a pinkish fluid make.
Cabbage juice staying blue means you found a base.
Cabbage juice with bleach, though, is turning green;
Heavens! A chemical reaction unforeseen.

Glasses strewn on kitchen table, tablespoons of love,
Careful mixing of antacids and the smelly stuff;
We tolerate the messes and hope nothing explodes
For sake of experiments further down the road.

Avogadro’s number has nothing much to tell us
Here on a Sunday while younger brother’s jealous.
“I want to blow stuff up!” he says; someday his chance will come.
Meanwhile, I ladle cabbage juice into a poem.

If only we each got six glasses for our mixtures.
But all our lives are made of tests that became our fixtures.
Hypothesize, trial run, measure and record;
You take the acid, form your base, and keep on moving forward.

Metachat launches on MySpace

 Posted by (Visited 7614 times)  Gamemaking  Tagged with: ,
Mar 132008
 

Metachat logoWow, it’s been a crazy couple of weeks.:)

We’ve said all along that Metaplace is a platform for making all sorts of virtual worlds. I know a lot of you are waiting for games written in it – specifically an RPG, probably. But well, games are hard, and they take time. And we didn’t see any reason to wait! So we decided that it was time to start releasing some of the worlds that have been made with Metaplace, and today we launched the first one – a simple chat room.

This is part of the OpenSocial launch on MySpace, so it’ll be interesting and exciting to be in the first wave of apps… as of right now, we seem to be the #1 app. Of course, it just launched a few minutes ago. 😉 I fully expect to get overtaken any second now by Flixster…

There’s a more detailed post on this over at the Metaplace website, including some implementation tidbits.

If you have a MySpace profile, you can hit the apps page to add it, or visit Metachat directly.

Report on software for brain training

 Posted by (Visited 5228 times)  Game talk  Tagged with:
Mar 112008
 

Not “game industry” per se, but games are what drive this market right now. Pretty interesting.

» Report: The State of the Brain Fitness Software Market 2008 « Brain Fitness Revolution at SharpBrains

5) Over 400 residential facilities for older adults have launched computerized “brain fitness centers.” Sales to the healthcare and insurance provider segment grew from $35 million in 2005 to an estimated $65 million in 2007.6) More than five programs have shown results in randomized controlled trials. Cognitive functions that can be trained include: visual and auditory processing, working memory, attention, and decision-making.

A letter to a 12-year-old

 Posted by (Visited 10083 times)  Game talk
Mar 112008
 

I recently got one of those letters from a student asking about my job. Someday, I suppose, I will be too busy to answer letters like this. But I am not just quite yet. It’s been sitting on my desk guilting me for over a month now.

So here’s my answer, which may help other 12-year-olds out there wondering about getting into the industry. BTW, if you had to recommend a programming language to today’s 12-year-olds, what would it be?

Dear _______,

I’m sorry it took me so long to answer your letter – more than a month! I hope it’s OK with your teacher that I took so long. You’re right that a video game career is cool and fun but very challenging – it also keeps me very busy.

Continue reading »

PMOG is going beta…!

 Posted by (Visited 7386 times)  Game talk  Tagged with: ,
Mar 112008
 

Justin Hall’s nifty web metagame PMOG is going beta, and you can sign up on their site.

In short, you install an extension to Firefox. Then you browse. You can leave stuff on pages (like bombs!), gain Xp and level up by browsing, do quests, etc. Basically, it layers an RPG on top of browsing: you even have character classes.

This is a great example of the inversion in thinking that comes with the Web approach to doing stuff. I remember toying with a similar but different idea back in the SWG days — an MMO that slurped real world web pages into a full 3d world, and that you ran around in “cyberspace” and played an RPG. How obvious it seems now to instead do it outside of a 3d immersive client!