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Coding is a Text Adventure

Wired News is running a story about a new approach to crossover working and gaming turning your coding into a MUD-style adventure. Playsh is a "narrative-driven 'object navigation' client, operating primarily on the semantic level, casting your hacking environment as a high-level, shell-based, social prototyping laboratory, a playground for recombinant network toys." Great, now they are combining two of the most horrible addictions in my life.

3 of 122 comments (clear)

  1. Usability and Games: 17 Excellent References by webword · · Score: 1, Offtopic

    Usability and Games: 17 Excellent References -- "If you're interested in video games and computer games, as well as usability and user experience (UX), this is exactly the list of references for you."

    1. Re:Usability and Games: 17 Excellent References by webword · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      D4mn. I did *not* intend to link to the article through Digg. Here's how it happened. I had Digg open at the same time as Slashdot, went to my Diig profile, grabbed the link, then came back here and quickly slapped the post together. (Note: First post.) By the time I realized what happened, it was too late.

      Mea culpa. And yes, I feel the (current) -1 Offtopic is deserved.

      The 17 game and UX references are still useful, despite my faux pas.

  2. Text Adventure! by Martindale · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    Talking about text adventures, coding GWing.net has been an extraordinary text adventure... then again, that's the whole point. (We're making an animation out of the users' forum-based text adventures... =D)

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