Once more: a great party. Tonight the University of Tampere celebrates its graduates. Evening in the great hall now has a distinctive feeling of a family event, academia opening its doors once for families and the surrounding society in general. Congratulations, Laura!
Month: December 2005
player-centred game design (pcd.. pcgd?)
I noticed T.L.Taylor posted this note about Olli Sotamaa’s and our team’s paper in DAC into Terra Nova (her last there, btw, pity), and discussed player-centred game design also more generally. There appears to be several interesting developments in this area, both in research world, and within the industry, but we also have to remember what are the realities particularly of the smaller studios and focus on how to make the player-centric processes also more designer-friendly. But I am a firm believer in PCD philosophy: only by hearing real people out there (rather than only following our own tastes and instincts) can we see the culture of gaming facing some real fundamental changes.
w-zero3 or communicator?
Gizmodo ran a short story about this new smartphone, nicely named W-Zero3, which appears (with its large screen, full qwerty keyboard, 1.3 megapixel camera – plus Wi-Fi, bluetooth and all the other usual communications stuff – as a worthy competitor for the Nokia Communicator line. Only question: will it come to Europe (and will I get mine with a Finnish keyboard). Make a guess…
mobile games' challenges
Every games market has its challenges, but making downloadable games succeed in those thousands of versions you need to produce from every single title aimed for today’s fragmented global phone and operator market is perhaps even more challenging than some. Jami Laes from Sumea/Digital Chocolate spoke today in G&S series, emphasizing that mobile is its own medium. Design needs to understand ‘casual’ as easy approachability for any phone user, mobile as the “social computer”.
portti sf prize
Tonight another party (guess it is the season), the evening of Portti SF prize, the best science fiction short story of the year. Jenny Kangasvuo, the winner, celebrates tonight after several years in second or other places. Fantasy story finally convinced us in the jury this year. A fine, ambiguous reworking of the ancient Seal Woman tale. Congratulations!
context/presence in mobile
The geek site Gizmodo ran this Airtime story on presence applications in mobile phones. Worth checking out also if you are interested in location-aware / pervasive games, like some.
demographies of the "active gamer"
If you are interested in the recent news on how the gamer demographies are widening, and mobile games playing gradually becoming more common, take a look at this BusinessWeek story of couple Nielsen Entertainment reports.
tv trip, thunderbird config
Another night in a hotel. At some point it was actually fun to be in a (relatively) clean room, where someone else takes care of your laundry. But the anonymity and rootlessness finally gets you. I am supposed to talk about games and simulation in national television (MTV3 morning show) tomorrow, and for those five minutes it was necessary to make two two-hour train trips, and spend a night in a hotel. (Added irony, BBC World show ‘Business Traveller’ just displays images captured from Rovaniemi, my old home town at the Arctic Circle. Things and people displaced, in a complex dance of matter and some mind.)
I am currently trying out Mozilla Thunderbird as the default email program at my work laptop. After years of working with MS Outlook, the simple act of transferring my contacts, mails and filtering rules into this other program is not so simple. Thunderbird crashed almost at the very start. After sacrificing perhaps 95 % of my correspondence archives (I still count on having a backup copy at my home PC), I got this Mozilla thing running. It has its benefits, I admit: it is not as heavy as that enourmous bloatware of Outlook, and it mostly does well those things you expect from a mail program. But there are some stupidities, too. Everyone with a laptop inevitably will also have to use several outgoing mail servers (SMTP). There appears to be no drop-down menu in the compose new message window that would allow you to select among those you have; there is only the tortuous process of going into the advanced mail account settings – and you have to do this every time you move from context to another! I am currently looking into Thunderbird add-ons (extensions), whether someone in this happy family of open-source software would have come up with a solution to this issue. But during the Tampere-Pasila train travel, Thunderbird was having numerous hiccups (endlessly trying to copy all sent messages into ‘Sent’ folder, without success, perhaps because of the breaky GPRS connection, even if it should be able to work off-line perfectly – and I even do not want to have outgoing messages copied into the Sent folder: I want them in those project folders I originally started to write that reply message!)
This is perhaps again one of those boring techno-rambles, sorry; but for a person whose work is extremely dependent on online tools, and email most of all, the decision over the email program is something that will have a major impact later on.
birthdays, parties
Yesterday, I escaped for a moment, skipping the second day of Kulttuurintutkimuksen Päivät, and took a train to Jyväskylä. Kanerva had a great party, fine gifted people with impressive music and theatre — million thanks! There are far too seldom
moments that are just dedicated to being together, and enjoying life. If you have some opportunity, anything, to throw a party, to yourselves, family, friends: grasp it! 
wi-fi ixus and communicator for the road?
Now this would be a nice combo for mobile blogging and other on-the-road work: the forthcoming Nokia 9300i Communicator has built-in Wi-Fi, and so has Canon Ixus. Together it should be a travelling dream combo, one with nice full keyboard, broad range of functionalities, good picture quality, and strong communication capabilities. But then again, the cost is rather steep: both of them together would make more than 1000 euros, oh dear…
Another dream: to have smart web service platform that could actually be relied to keep e.g. the links working, or removing them if needed. Just spent a couple of hours in fixing some obvious mistakes in the links of these 160+ blog notes. 



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