The last Harry Potter
Found it in the mailbox at 9pm, after waiting for it to be dropped at the door all day. Just finished it (it’s 1am).
A worthy end.
Found it in the mailbox at 9pm, after waiting for it to be dropped at the door all day. Just finished it (it’s 1am).
A worthy end.
Whoof, a huge backlog to get through here, and I have already added more to the finished stack that I want to mention. So brief reviews this time.
Made to Stick: Why Some Ideas Survive and Others Die was really, really good. The book is basically about what makes concepts memorable when you present them. The authors outline a very simple formula that lines up well with the various book I have read on cognitive psych (in fact, the bibliography shares a large number of books with A Theory of Fun). Highly recommended — this is one of the best general popsci/business books I have read in quite a while.
Or more specifically, the South Park episode “Make Love, Not Warcraft” is up for an Emmy.
Quite a lot of the humor in this episode didn’t work unless you had some sense of what a virtual world was — and not just what Hollywood thought it was (Lawnmower Man, Disclosure, I am thinking of you!) but what they actually work like.
So the fact that the episode is seen as being that worthy is some sort of cultural metric for general awareness and understanding of virtual worlds and MMOs — at least among the Academy voting membership.
Chore Wars :: Earning Experience Points for Housework is another application of game logic to serious work, brought to you by the guy who made Urban Dead.
Chores are supposed to be serious. I can’t seem to get my kids to take them seriously, even by attaching monetary valuation to them.
Interestingly, the kids did have a good run about two weeks ago. The reason? They had found they wre missing a Pokemon game for the Gamecube from a few years ago. So they had to have it. And we refused to buy it, and told them they had to spend their own money. Goal established. Next, the game framework: they already earned dollars for their allownace by doing chores, but Kristen set it up so that whichever kid did more chores won the week and the higher dollar amount. The competition was on, and they did something like ten times the usual number of chores that week, and bought the game. Now they’ve reverted to their usual slothful behavior. 😉
And I guess I need to feel quite flattered.
And no, knowing him, he wouldn’t say this just because he’s on our advisory board.
The other four:
I think I might have to shoot myself if asked to come up with a similar list. He himself mentions Philip Rosedale and Rob Pardo…