A Game Played In the URL Bar
Kilrah_il writes "Whether you think it is useful or useless, you can't ignored the sheer cool geekiness of a game played entirely in the URL bar. From the article: '... While getting lost in a three dimensional virtual world amongst increasingly thoughtful plot and character development may be an adequate pastime for some, the only new title the gaming world should be talking about is URL Hunter, an experimental keyboard-character based game played entirely in your browser's URL bar.'"
Well that filled up my history nice and good.
to get back to slashdot.
Is it a good game? Not really. The gameplay is pretty awful, and the concept is naturally pretty limited. But it's clever and unusual, and highlights something that is both useful and not widespread enough (the ability to set navigation without leaving a loaded page) as well as something that is of questionable utility but novel (manipulation of an interface element that's currently guaranteed to exist in any desktop user agent to act as a presentation element).
People can dismiss it, as they have done and surely will do until this article falls below the fold, but it's pretty neat conceptually. It's not earth-shattering. Just neat.
I use TinyURL, they have a 'Preview' feature that lets you see the actual URL before visiting the destination site - requires cookies.
Go here - http://tinyurl.com/preview.php - and click the link that says "Click here to enable previews."
in lynx.
"I believe in Karma. That means I can do bad things to people all day long and I assume they deserve it." : Dogbert
DEFENDER played in the favicon.
http://www.p01.org/releases/DEFENDER_of_the_favicon/
Amusing for a few seconds, this uses JS?
Yep.
Here, I wrote a JavaScript: URL that creates a Tetris game at the top of whatever page you're on.
URL Tetris
Protip: Create a Bookmark, set the Location of the bookmark to the tetris code... Click the bookmark and play tetris on any web page.
Nope, that is in fact the standard convention for the plurals of lowercase letters:
http://owl.english.purdue.edu/owl/resource/621/01/
I won't call you a punctuation nazi, because Nazis at least made an effort to know their own rules.