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November 23, 2005

PSP/Royal College of Art Exhibition

Taken from the exhibit site:

6 students from Design Products, Industrial Design Engineering and Interaction Design at the Royal College of Art have designed a landscape of concept furniture derived from the statue-like forms of people sitting, standing or leaning against walls engaged in playing the PlayStation Portable (PSP). The furniture is designed for use specifically when playing the PSP, and can be tried out during the exhibition.

Inspiration and ideas
PSP players with coats over their heads. The cocoon-like nature of the furniture is related to the experience of playing games on the PSP. Initial inspiration came from observing group play at a barbecue: when still light in the early evening, a group of players put their coats over their heads to create shade and see the PSP's screen better. Despite not being able to see each other at all, they continued to happily taunt, insult and otherwise interact with each other as is the norm throughout the course of a game. Later on, we observed people huddled together during play, adopting statue-like poses and postures – some sitting, some standing, some leaning – largely unaware of the party going on around them.

PSP players engrossed in play. This everyday re-appropriation and simple, utilitarian acts on the part of the players became useful metaphors for what the students found most interesting about the PSP, as well as other devices like it: that they are simultaneously public and private objects, that they encourage shared experience but require a degree of isolation and immersion, and that proximity is as much a factor as mobility. How do designers address the immateriality and relatively new language of use of these devices? What impact will they have on future patterns of living?

November 22, 2005

Leeroy Jenkins on Jeopardy!

I recently saw this video linked to on Kotaku. Alex Trebek asking a World of WarCraft question is fairly surreal, and the blank looks on the faces of the contestants are fairly priceless.

I suppose any game meriting a Jeopardy question has truly entered the mainstream.