My New Blog
I have a new blog: Post Position. Here’s my welcome post.
ICCC X, the First International Conference on Computational Creativity, will be taking place January 7-9 in Lisbon. The X, I believe, indicates the decade of workshops and symposia leading up to this conference. Here’s the scoop:
Although it seems clear that creativity plays an important role in developing intelligent computational systems, it is less clear how to model, simulate, or evaluate creativity in such systems. In other words, it is often easier to recognize the presence and effect of creativity than to describe or prescribe it.
The purpose of this conference is to facilitate the exchange of ideas on the topic of computational creativity in a cross-disciplinary setting.
Daniel Benmergui of “Storyteller” and “I wish I were the Moon” fame has a beautiful new piece out, one that is a poem as well as a game: “Today I Die.” Announcement of release here.
MAYA Design’s whitepaper “The Wrong Could” by Peter Lucas, Joseph Ballay, and Ralph Lombreglia contains the best cloud-computing metaphors yet, ones that are incisive as well as amusing:
Today’s so-called cloud isn’t really a cloud at all. It’s a bunch of corporate dirigibles painted to look like clouds. You can tell they’re fake because they all have logos on them. Real clouds don’t have logos.
Here’s what the Boston Cyberarts Festival exhibit at 1305 Boylston Street, which offered visitors the opportunity to play several Atari VCS games along with Tempest 2000 (Jaguar), Rez (Dreamcast), and Bit.Trip Beat (Wii), looked like:

The last photo shows George Fifield (director of the Boston Cyberarts Festival), Andrew Y Ames, and Nick Montfort (caught by the camera in his weekend attire).
No, people weren’t ticked off – we had a great event full of Processing programming today at MIT, at Processing Time, part of the Boston Cyberarts Festival. Update: Screenshot of the winning program from the MIT News Office.


In case you were wondering where the hypertext novel has gone – it’s right here, and still being updated by the enigmatic Daniel W. from a secret location on the Lower East Texas. Paperback also available.
Konami just canceled their game Six Days in Fallujah due to public outcry. (Critical outcry couldn’t have helped.) There’s also been some outcry in favor of the game, along with a declaration that video games should be acknowledged as having the power of art and as being able to take on difficult contemporary subject matter. For instance, in this IGN editorial by Michael Thomsen.
It wasn’t the first video game, or even the first arcade game, but that’s like sort of like saying the Model T wasn’t the first car. Pong looms large in both arcade and home video game history. The cabinet and the home unit helped pave the way for economically successful video games, the basic game form was changed and reinvented in numerous ways, and Pong became part of the zeitgeist. Recently, the movie rights to Pong have even been optioned by Uwe Boll.
Pong‘s design and engineering, its relationship to earlier games, and its launch can be discussed in very great detail, and they have been in many books and various digital forms, from FAQ to page to site. In our book Racing the Beam: The Atari Video Computer System, Ian Bogost and I briefly describe how Pong blasted into the arcade video game space that Bushnell’s Computer Space had attempted to open up:
The first Pong unit was installed in Andy Capp’s Tavern, a bar in Sunnyvale, California. Increasingly apocryphal stories of the game’s installation report lines out the door but almost never mention the precedent for coin-operated video games in Andy Capp’s. When Alcorn installed Pong in the summer of 1972, Computer Space was sitting there in the bar already.
Pong solved the problem that plagued Computer Space—ease of use—partly by being based on the familiar game table tennis and partly thanks to the simplicity of its gameplay instructions. “Avoid missing ball for high score” was a single sentence clear enough to encourage pick-up play, but vague enough to create the partial reinforcement of the slot machine and the midway; after failing, players wanted to try again. One other important sentence appeared on the machine: “Insert coin.”
In this post, I’ll mention a few things that I think made Pong appealing to tavern game players in the early 1970s. Then, I’ll look to how a handful of the many Pong remakes over the years have tried to refashion the game for new settings.
perl -le 'sub p{(unpack"(A3)*",pop)[rand 18]}sub w{p("apebotboyelfgodmannunorcgunhateel"x2)}sub n{p("theone"x8)._.p("bigdimdunfathiplitredwanwax")._.w.w."\n"}{print"\n".n."and\n".n.p("cutgothitjammetputransettop"x2)._.p("herhimin it offon outup us "x2);sleep 4;redo}'
A new site, Sarien.net, provides something both convenient and uncanny: The ability to play several of Sierra’s graphical adventures as you watch other players’ avatars move through the world and act – without affecting the space you’re in. Thanks to GameSetWatch for this one.
Inform 7 has a new website with explanatory screencasts, a new version of the development system (build 5Z71), many parts of the toolchain now being offered as free/open-source software, and physics!
Ian Bogost, co-author with me of Racing the Beam, has just announced a CRT television emulator – a project to make an emulator’s display look more like that of a circa 1980 television. The code is to be integrated into the full-featured Atari 2600 emulator Stella.
Yesterday a group of us from the HASTAC III conference toured the Grand Text Auto exhibit here at UIUC’s Krannert Art Museum, which was curated by Damon Baker. The exhibit is great! Although many of the same pieces appear from the UCI Grand Text Auto exhibit, it’s different in several ways and has several new pieces. Update: Thanks to HASTAC scholar Veronica Paredes, there’s now a video and text about the exhibit up on the HASTAC blog. Check it out!
The presentation of pieces is very nice; Damon has put up helpful curatorial texts and presented both interactive and non-interactive pieces very thoughtfully. Mary’s [giantJoystick] hasn’t made it to campus yet, although there’s a 16′ tall space here right at the center of the NSCA building waiting for it. The elaborate augmented reality incarnation of Façade couldn’t be mounted again. However, the desktop Façade is exhibited very nicely; it shares center stage with Noah et al.’s Screen on the CANVAS in the Krannert Art Museum’s Intermedia Gallery. Scott et al.’s The Unknown is presented as a browsable hypertext, an open book, photos and texts, audio that plays continually, and a hotel bell. Scott’s Frequency appears on a computer and his and my collaboration, Implementation, is on display in manuscript and photographs. And, I have many small pieces throughout the exhibit: ppg256-1 and ppg256-2, Winchester’s Nightmare, and Taroko Gorge.
A nice thing about the exhibit is that the underlying works are almost all available for free online; in every case, there’s documentation of them. Here are the links:
I’m here in Urbana, Illinois at the third and biggest annual HASTAC (Humanities, Arts, Science, and Technology Advanced Collaboratory) conference. We’re being hosted by the Institute for Computing in Humanities, Arts, and Social Science (I-CHASS) at UIUC.
There are actually official, HASTAC-appointed bloggers for each of the events, so I’m not planning to step on their virtual toes by doing summary blogging of every panel. But I’ll mention some things about the first panel, to try to get off to a good start and give a sense of the conference. Later, I’ll hope to reflect on the Grand Text Auto exhibit a bit, too.
In Steve Meretzky’s interview with Technology Review, he talks about how he got started at the company, the z-machine, how technologically advanced Infocom’s software was, and how important it was that games there were individual efforts.
There’s a new Grand Text Auto exhibit, following up on the one we had at UCI. This one has just opened at the Krannert Art Museum at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, and will be up through July 26. Come and check it out, if that’s at all feasible. I’ll be there on Monday at or around 4pm for a tour of the exhibit given by curator Damon Loren Baker, part of the HASTAC III conference program.
The second issue of UpRightDown has just begun. What exactly has begun is a year-long storytelling exercise. “Every two weeks we will post a new episode of the plot (left column), which can then be performed (right column) in words, image, video, sound, et cetera.”
The magazine is also giving away prizes: $1000 to the best performance, $300 to the best plot.
The periodic table of game controllers is clever – and collapses the history of controllers in an interesting and probably typical way. For each system, only one controller is represented. Although both paddle controllers and joysticks shipped with the Atari VCS, only the joysticks (with their buttons in the wrong place) are represented. Certainly there is no hint that odd things like the Joyboard (ancestor of Wii Fit) or Kirby Tilt n’ Tumble (ancestor of the Wiimote) existed. On the other hand, the table does represent the way that many people think about game controllers, and it’s not uninteresting as a piece of graphic design.
If you are into computer games – and particularly if you are also into philosophy and/or already live in Norway (Scott? Scott?) – you should check out this third international conference in a series, “The Philosophy of Computer Games 2009.” It’s being held in Oslo August 12-15 2009.
In the tradition of The Witness (Stu Galley, Infocom, 1983) comes the hard-boiled interactive fiction Make It Good, by Jon Ingold. It was more than seven years in the making and features non-player characters directed by AI. Check out the description on IFDB and then download the (z-machine) game.
Flame War: A Cyberthriller
By Joshua Quittner and Michelle Slatalla
William Morrow & Company
1997
291 pp.
I had long wanted to incorporate an extra revision step in ppg256-1, my first 256-character poetry generator, to make strings such as “maar” and “bued” into words (specifically, “mar” and “bad”). Also, it annoyed me that in ppg256-1, the code to delay the output is in a separate perl program; the generator must be piped to it. In ppg256-2 this delay is integrated into the generator. So, I revisited the first program and rewrote it so that it does the additional revision and now produces output at a human pace:
perl -le 'sub b{@_=unpack"(A2)*",pop;$_[rand@_]}sub w{" ".b("cococacamamadebapabohamolaburatamihopodito").b("estsnslldsckregspsstedbsnelengkemsattewsntarshnknd")}{$_="\n\nthe".w."\n";$_=w." ".b("attoonnoof").w if$l;s/[au][ae]/a/;print;$l=0if$l++>rand 9;sleep 1;redo}'
Wikipedia may become available under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike license. The site currently uses the GNU Free Documentation License, but the board has suggested a change. I find the GFDL cumbersome and not really appropriate for something that isn’t software documentation; the CC-BY-SA switch would facilitate sharing of material both into and out of Wikipedia. Whatever you think, if you edit (and aren’t a bot), go vote.
IndieCade (International Festival of Independent Games) invites submissions now for the 2009 festival. The deadline is April 30.
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