Yesterday, I stumbled upon an article on cheating and hacking in video games, by Feross Aboukhadijeh, a computer science student at Stanford University. It was a fairly short piece of work, and didn't go into much detail, but I liked its portrayal of hacking as being positive unless it adversely affects the experience of other players (online hacking, etc).
I sent him an email to thank him for the article, which apparently reminded him that he'd forgotten to publish the finished version. It's now up on his blog, and it's a good read:
http://www.feross.org/cheating-in-video-games/
On a side note, his blog in general is cool, and the guy's a genius. He created Instant.fm, and co-created YouTube Instant, which won him fame, an article in just about every technical and computing magazine, site, and blog out there, and a job offer from the founder of YouTube. Drop by his blog and pay homage: http://Feross.org
I sent him an email to thank him for the article, which apparently reminded him that he'd forgotten to publish the finished version. It's now up on his blog, and it's a good read:
http://www.feross.org/cheating-in-video-games/
On a side note, his blog in general is cool, and the guy's a genius. He created Instant.fm, and co-created YouTube Instant, which won him fame, an article in just about every technical and computing magazine, site, and blog out there, and a job offer from the founder of YouTube. Drop by his blog and pay homage: http://Feross.org

Comment