Public chat room, open to all collaborators.
SPEW (http://nideffer.net/proj/spew/) is a exploration game that filters and re-contextualizes data feeds from all over the web into a pointed commentary about several current events. The data arcade, hidden inside the main environment, explores alternate methods of data presentation through the manipulation of game parameters from several faithful recreations of well-known video game classics.
DinoQuest Online (dqonline.org) is an online portal that supplements the DinoQuest exhibit at the Discovery Science Center in Santa Ana with web exclusive games and rewards. It has a unique unlock system where the game automatically tracks your progress between the physical exhibit and the online portal, earning the player unique unlocks in one location for visiting the other.
The WTF?! Project (http://www.aoedipus.net/) is a flash-based parody of World of Warcraft. Through the lens of real world scientists and philosophers trapped in an alternate universe that is full of self-aware and meta-gaming NPCs, this opening chapter of WTF?! scratches the surface of a giant canvas of social and economical ramifications in MMORPGs. A free SDK for the engine (wtf-sdk) is also available for download.
The WTF?! Software Development Kit (http://wiki.aoedipus.net) is a full fledged content development platform for the flash-based WTF?! game and game engine. Through the editors available, users can create their own side scrolling ARPG by incorporating original graphics and sound.
The Game Lab is a part of UCI's Center for Computer Games and Virtual Worlds (CCG&VW). The center's goal is to expand campus-wide research activities that draw upon UCI’s strengths spanning the social and technological aspects of games and virtual worlds. More than 35 faculty members from computer science, arts, humanities, social science and education will collaborate in the center.
Changing from 8.04 LTS to 9.10 server proved to be a non-trivial task. Some problems were due to certain limitations due to the hardware, others were very surprising. This post discusses the issues that came up.
Introduction:
For our Linux testing environments, we have been using Ubuntu Linux. I have prefered using Ubuntu since I switched from Debian a number of years ago.
The goal of this group is to allow researchers at UCI using OpenSim to share information and resources.