Cooking with Windows recap
We made recipes from CD-ROM cookbooks. Here are our thoughts about them and their (mostly terrific) food.
We made recipes from CD-ROM cookbooks. Here are our thoughts about them and their (mostly terrific) food.
On April 8th, 2017, a few friends and I will attempt to cook recipes from old CD-ROM cookbooks. It could be amazing or a total disaster!
Inspired by CD-ROM adventure games, Dorling Kindersley’s virtual museum of earth science is like an encyclopedia blown up into a colossal educational destination.
The art program Flying Colors is now free to download – plus a bonus link to an interview with the artist behind its graphics.
Edmark’s storytelling program uses believable, educational settings – which is perfect for making creative mischief.
Unlike so many other digital art studios for kids, Imagynasium‘s playfully limited collage world wants to figure out what drives you to the creative process and how to keep you there.
John Hiles, head of Maxis Business Simulations and Thinking Tools, shares his perspective on the foundational theories of the simulation genre and responds to criticism of the value of predictive simulation games.
Microsoft Home’s Jurassic reference guide upends the digital encyclopedia model by showing the relations between articles, even if its information is out-of-date.
This unique, stunning surrealist self-help guide gets arrogant when it uses the strengths of the multimedia CD-ROM format to make players examine how they think.
Music Brush creates expressionist art that toys with animation and music, which also makes it a great tool for idle reflection.