It’s all twofer links this week.
- The many faces of DOOM’s afterlife. A good example of what open source can do for the lifetime of a software project. (via)
- The forgotten joys of turtling in strategy games. (also via)
- Perl6 One Liners. (via)
- How Unix erases things when you type a backspace while entering text. (via)
- Whatever happened to Winamp? Arguably one of the better programs ever put together. (via)
- Shut Up & Sit Down, tabletop board/card gaming reviews. There’s far more out there than I ever realized. (via I’m not sure at this point, sorry.)
- A pragmatic decision on GNU Emacs versus Vim for programming. (via)
- The TTY demystified. (via)
- THE GRAY-1, A HOMEBREW CPU EXCLUSIVELY COMPOSED OF MEMORY (also via)
- The BD Software C Compiler (BDS C). From 1979. (via)
- Minesweeper: Advanced Tactics. (also via)
- How piracy can accidentally encourage IPv6 adoption.
- Dwarf Fortress and the Terrible, Horrible, No Good, Very Bad Interface.
- Free Online Courses at openculture. Get past the page ads, and there’s got to be something in that very long list that interests you. (lost source, sorry)
- Cards Against Silicon Valley. The description of the game is more fun than the game, but then again maybe so is what it’s parodying. (via)
- Vim’s 25th anniversary and the release of Vim 8. (via)
Your unrelated entertainment activities of the day: Places to Telnet. (indirectly via)