participation

Latest

  • Storyboard: Making the most of the event

    by 
    Eliot Lefebvre
    Eliot Lefebvre
    05.27.2011

    It's Tuesday night, and your guild has been hosting a roleplaying event that started back at 7 p.m. You've been here for two hours, and you can't shake the feeling that you're essentially watching every high school party ever unfold in front of you in-character. A slow and (to your opinion) half-hearted conversation is the only thing happening, and everyone else's character is just standing around waiting to have something involving happen. And in the back of your mind, you assume that everyone else must enjoy this sort of thing and that there's something wrong with you because you don't. True story? Yes. Far too often, I've seen this happen -- and in my younger days of roleplaying, I would let it happen. And since I want to start talking more about events, it strikes me that one of the first things to talk about is how to improve your enjoyment of events from an attendee's standpoint. You didn't organize what's going on, and you didn't have a theme in mind, but you're here now and you are either going to spend the rest of the evening standing and not having fun... or you're going to enjoy yourself.

  • Join us for a Tablet talkcast this evening at 5:30pm Eastern

    by 
    Mike Schramm
    Mike Schramm
    01.27.2010

    Everyone's currently engaged with the fervor over the pending announcement, but once the dust settles, there'll be lots and lots of opinions to be shared and "will you/won't you buy it" conversations to be had. That's what our talkcast is for! This evening at 5:30pm Eastern, we invite you to join us over on Talkshoe.com for a special edition of our weekly TUAW Talkcast, all about today's announcement and what it means for the Appleverse at large. A crew of TUAW regulars will be aboard with us, and you'll be invited to call up yourself and share your own opinions about what has happened today. Please join us -- the talkcast will kick off this evening at 5:30pm Eastern on our Talkshoe page (right in the middle of the latest edition of TUAW TV Live, which starts up at 5 this evening). Bring your opinions, please! To participate on TalkShoe, you can use the browser-only client, the embedded Facebook app, or the classic TalkShoe Pro Java client; however, for maximum fun, you should call in. For the web UI, just click the "TalkShoe Web" button on our profile page at 10 pm Sunday. To call in on regular phone or VoIP lines (take advantange of your free cellphone weekend minutes if you like): dial (724) 444-7444 and enter our talkcast ID, 45077 -- during the call, you can request to talk by keying in *-8. If you've got a headset or microphone handy on your Mac, you can connect via the free Gizmo or X-Lite SIP clients; basic instructions are here. Talk with you then!

  • Motorola quietly takes one step away from LiMo, looks to Android for consolation

    by 
    Darren Murph
    Darren Murph
    10.12.2009

    Man, remember LiMo? Amazingly, there are some 40 handsets on the market today based on the platform, but precisely none of them are boasting a profile as high as any one of the Android smartphones also on store shelves. As Motorola scrambles to re-make itself and prove that its CLIQ is a force to be reckoned with in the burgeoning Android phone sector, the company has also decided to remove itself as a "founding member" of the LiMo Foundation. The company recently noted that the outfit was sliding down to "associate member," stating that "at this time it feels that the Android platform gives it a richer, more consistent foundation with strong support for the ecosystem and developer community." That's a pretty damning statement to our ears, but we won't go so far as to call the breakup between Moto and LiMo official; we're guessing "it's complicated" would be entirely more appropriate here.[Via phonescoop]

  • Government workshop on evaluation of broadband included Second Life users

    by 
    Seraphina Brennan
    Seraphina Brennan
    08.06.2009

    This morning's workshop on using broadband internet to increase the US government's transparency and citizen participation included a brand new feature -- Second Life participation.The workshop was streamed live to the MacArthur Foundation's island in Second Life as a representative forwarded questions from the citizens over to the participants of the FCC's workshop. Second Life citizens were able to be hands on with the workshop, getting their questions sent over a specific channel to be answered as they came in."In developing our nation's National Broadband Plan, we are committed to finding innovative, cutting-edge ways -- both online and offline -- to reach out to the public and elicit suggestions, questions, and insight regarding our nation's broadband future," said Jen Howard, the FCC chairman's spokesperson, to New World Notes. "We are delighted that this first workshop will have an aperture into Second Life and that staff is experimenting in such ways to reach all stakeholders."[Via GamePolitics] Are you a part of the most widely-known collaborative virtual environment or keeping a close eye on it? Massively's Second Life coverage keeps you in the loop.