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The Georgia Institute of Technology Persuasive Games Open Texture Water Cooler Games
Ian Bogost - videogame theory, criticism, design
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December 14, 2009
Platform Studies: Frequently Questioned Answers
Paper written with Nick Montfort for Digital Arts and Cultures 2009
September 11, 2009
In the War on Ideas, War Always Wins
On the British Government's neglect of Alan Turing's role in the history of computation
In the winter of 1952, Alan Turing called on the Manchester police to investigate a break-in at his house. He suspected an estranged lover was responsible and, being the earnest man that he was, reported his suspicion to the police. The problem was, Turing's lover was Arnold Murray. Homosexuality was ...
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Guru Meditation
for Atari VCS and iPhone

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Writing and Blog Posts
Dynamic Difficulty Adjustment
Art History of Games on YouTube
It's This for That
Two Books, One Summer
Persuasive Games in Paperback
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Dakota Reese Brown on Dynamic Difficulty Adjustment
David Kociemba on The University of Stockholm Syndrome
Jamey Stevenson on Top 10 Ways Bartenders Screw Up My Old Fashioneds
Ian Bogost on Art History of Games on YouTube
Robert Solomon on Art History of Games on YouTube
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Top Ten Reasons I Returned My Kindle
Carrying On Over Carry-Ons
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Chumby and the Rhetoric of Openness
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