Command & Conquer coded in HTML5
January 24, 2012 – 9:57 pm | No Comment

Remember the classic RTS known as Command & Conquer? Well, an enterprising coder, Aditya Ravi Shankar, actually recreated the strategy game using nothing but HTML5, where it runs on 69k of Javascript. Why did he set out on such an adventure? For starters, Shankar’s attempt was a self-mandated undertaking in order to improve his coding skills, where he gave himself a one month window to rebuild the game in the browser, and had to comb through the original game’s files in order to obtain all the right sprites, sounds and specs. According to Shankar, “In hindsight, I might have wanted to take smaller steps and make a tower defense game instead of jumping directly into an RTS. Trying to do the whole thing in under a month all by myself wasn’t the smartest idea.” As part of Shankar’s recreation of Command & Conquer, it included buildings, terrain, combat, tiberium harvesting and regrowth, in addition to the ability to sell and repair buildings. You want fog of war? It has that, too, in addition to a pannable map, different cursors, …

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Every Single One of Cormac McCarthy’s Works Was Typed on This [Retromodo]

Submitted by admin on December 2, 2009 – 3:29 amNo Comment

5eaf97e849writer.jpg Every Single One of Cormac McCarthys Works Was Typed on This [Retromodo]Cormac McCarthy has spent many years bent over this typewriter banging out books and screenplays, including All the Pretty Horses, No Country for Old Men, and The Road. Now, after many decades, he’s giving up his trusty old gadget.

He’s not giving it up because he yearns for a newfangled bit of gear though. He’s trading it for an identical model and only because it’s not working as well as it should anymore. The original typewriter will be auctioned off by Christie’s with all the proceeds going to a charity.

What got to me about this whole thing though isn’t that McCarthy is doing something charitable or that he’s replacing a gadget. It’s how he describes it in the authentication letter to be given to the winning bidder:

It has never been serviced or cleaned other than blowing out the dust with a service station hose. … I have typed on this typewriter every book I have written including three not published. Including all drafts and correspondence I would put this at about five million words over a period of 50 years.

Despite the lack of maintenance given to the gadget, it’s easy to see that he has a genuine attachment to it, both in his words and in what he’s doing. Then again, I guess we’ve all got some piece of old school tech that we’re sentimental over, don’t we? [NY Times via Obsolete]

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