Pen and Paper RPGs In an Internet Age; Botanicula; and My Favorite Hand Gesture

Pen and Paper RPGs Designed for Internet Play?

The Neitherworld blog wonders what a pen and paper roleplaying game designed specifically for playing over the Internet might look like,

We’re playing games designed for a tabletop in another medium. We’re adapting.

…but what if there were RPGs designed specifically for such a medium? RPGs designed to be played by people online who aren’t all in the same location? I’m not talking about MMORPGs. I’m talking about something analogous to a tabletop RPG. Something flexible. What would such an RPG look like?

There are some interesting answers and ideas in the comments section.

Botanicula

Not sure how much fun it would be to play Botanicula, but it sure looks pretty

The History of Giving Someone the Finger

The BBC looks at the history of everyone’s favorite hand gesture which, it notes, “seems to have overtaken cultural, linguistic and national boundaries and can now be seen at protests, on football pitches, and at rock concerts across the world.”

As Louis Armstrong might put it, what a wonderful world.

Computer Virus Results in Convicted Murderer Getting a New Trial

A convicted murder in Florida is getting a new trial because the only copy of the trial transcript was destroyed by a computer virus,

[Court reporter Terlesa] Cowart, a courts spokeswoman told the Miami Herald, put the trial transcript on an internal disc instead, and then erased the data from the stenography machine’s memory disc.

She did back the disk up on her computer, but a virus on the computer later erased all of her notes. All that remained was a transcript of one pretrial hearing and the trial’s closing arguments.

It is bizarre that Florida courts don’t create at least a digital audio recording of all trial proceedings and have a backup system in place. It is crazy to think the pictures of my action figure collection have more backup redundancy than the official proceedings of the trial of someone accused of murder.

Cleverness To-Do List Plugin for WordPress

Cleverness To-Do List is a plugin for WordPress that adds a task list system, including a dashboard widget showing users what tasks they’ve been assigned.

You can configure the plugin to have private to-do lists for each user, to have all users share a to-do list, or to have a master list with individual completion of items. The shared to-do list has a variety of settings available. You can assign to-do items to a specific user (includes a setting to email a new to-do item to the assigned user) and optionally have those items only viewable by that user. You can also assign different permission levels using capabilities. There are also settings to show deadline and progress fields. Category support is included as well as front-end administration.

Review of Lenovo T420

Back in October 2011, I replaced the netbook I’d been using as my primary machine with a Lenovo T420. My problem with computers is that I tend to accumulate too many of them — one of my coworkers was laughing the day I had three laptops and a desktop going simultaneously on various projects.

I was using a netbook for meetings because of its portability and long battery life, a 17″ Gateway laptop for gaming, a Dell laptop for scanning and other secondary projects, and a desktop for video editing (I also have another Dell laptop given to me as part of a freelance project).

Too many f’ing laptops (I blame cloud-based syncing software). What I wanted was a single laptop that would be light enough and have the battery life to tote around everywhere in my backpack and yet be powerful enough to run games like World of Warcraft, Portal 2, etc. at decent frame rates.

I opted for the Lenovo T420, throwing in an i7-2640M Processor, 8gb of RAM (essential if you’re running Windows — 4gb just doesn’t cut it anymore), a 500gb 7200RPM hard drive (I’d have preferred an SSD if it weren’t for issues with doing whole disk encryption on them), a Nvidia Optimus 4200M graphics card, and a 9-cell battery.

With the 9-cell battery, the T420 weighs in at a little over 5 pounds. It is light enough that I have no problem sticking it in my backpack and taking me pretty much wherever I go. The 9-cell battery coupled with Lenovo’s software for managing power means I’ve had only 2-3 times in the past four months where the laptop actually ran out of power for me (on the other hand, I travel very infrequently — a real road warrior might find the battery life in my setup lacking). Obviously the battery life goes down considerably when I’m playing games and the Optimus 4200M kicks in. The battery does also stick out a bit from the body of the laptop, but much less pronounced than on other laptops I’ve used.

Overall the T420 hits the power vs. portability sweet spot for me. I can play games like World of Warcraft or Portal 2 a 1600 x 900 and get very high frame rates. Similarly, the T420 excels at all of the business and personal tasks I throw at it. Certainly I’ve used laptops that were much faster or much lighter, but the T420 is one of the few laptops I’ve owned that I felt I could do pretty much everything I wanted to do on it anywhere I wanted to do it.

One thing I’ve been especially impressed with is the T420’s cooling. I’ve never seen a laptop perform this well and yet stay so cool. If I set up a processor intensive job on my Dell, the damn thing heats up to the point where it would be unhealthy to continue to cradle on my lap. I really have to stress the T420 to notice much of any excessive heat.

The Lenovo keyboard is, of course, awesome. I type about 120wpm and the Lenovo is just a few steps below my Unicomp keyboard (though much quieter than the Unicomp’s switches, which makes my wife happier).

The only thing I wasn’t impressed by was some of Lenovo’s utilities, which I found to often conflict with existing Windows utilities. Also, I’ve seen a lot of longtime Thinkpad fans defend the LED light for the keyboard, but I’d definitely preferred a genuinely backlit keyboard like Dell has on some of their models (though not if it required changes in the keyboard itself).

DLC Quest

DLC Quest is an indie game for the Xbox 360 that does a hilarious job of mocking the rise of downloadable content for games. Ostensibly a 2D platformer, the hook is that almost every feature in DLC Quest has to be purchased by collecting coins and then trading them for DLC packs.

When the game starts, for example, your character can only move to the right. Want to move to the left? Then you need to buy the DLC Movement pack, which also allows jumping (its a bargain!)

Want to leave the room for a minute to grab a snack? Make sure you’ve purchased the Pause Menu pack first.

DLC Quest is available through Xbox Live, so, you guessed it — its only downloadable. Skyrim it’s not, but for only 80 Microsoft points (about $1), it is a clever, fun game that certainly makes its point.