Search

Search content of the knowledge base.

The search found 7 results in 0.007 seconds.

Search results

  1. Twine

    Twine is a tool created by Chris Klimas for making interactive fiction in the form of web pages. Twine emphasises the visual structure of hypertext and does not require knowledge of any programming languages like other popular game development tools do. The Twine software provides a visual representation of the hypertext structure, using a "node map". (Source: Wikipedia)

    Thor Baukhol Madsen - 07.04.2015 - 15:55

  2. RiTa

    RiTa† is designed to be an easy-to-use toolkit for experiments in natural language and generative literature. RiTa is implemented in Java and JavaScript with a single API and optionally integrates with Processing. It is free/libre and open-source via a GPL license.

    Some of the features of RiTa include:

    • Text-generation via Context-Free Grammars and Markov-chains
    • Taggers for Syllables, Phonemes, Stress, Part-of-Speech, etc.
    • Modules for tokenization, verb conjugation, pluralization, and stemming
    • A user-customizable lexicon with a letter-to-sound phoneme generation
    • Integration with Processing, ProcessingJS, and NodeJS
    • Runs in or outside the browser, with or without Processing
      (also in Android)
    • Optionally integrates with (locally-installed) WordNet dictionary

    (rednoise.org/rita/)

    Sumeya Hassan - 09.04.2015 - 15:07

  3. Layar

    Founded in the summer of 2009, Layar quickly gained international attention as one of the first mobile augmented reality browsers to hit the market. Our open development platform attracted thousands of developers from all of the world to create AR content as millions downloaded the Layar App for iOS and Android, making Layar the world's most popular platform for AR.

    Today, as part of the Blippar group, Layar is a global leader in Augmented Reality and Interactive Print, helping to bridge the gap between the print and digital worlds. Together, Layar and Blippar have collaborated with many of the world's top brands, including Pepsi, Coca-Cola, Procter & Gamble, General Mills, Anheuser-Busch, Elle, Glamour, Honda and BMW. The Layar and Blippar mobile apps have been downloaded over 46 million times, providing brands with access to a rapidly expanding audience of tech-savvy consumers eager to "unlock" the physical world with digital experiences.

    (Source: Layar.com/about)

    Eivind Farestveit - 09.04.2015 - 15:42

  4. textDNA

    TextDNA allows users to explore and analyze word usage across text collections of varying scale. With TextDNA, users can compare word usage between document collections (e.g., across different decades), between individual documents, or between elements within a document (e.g., chapters or acts). Word usage can be explored across raw texts, i.e., text documents not subject to processing. Additionally, word usage can be explored across different metrics, such as how frequently words are used within a document.

    TextDNA is based on the Sequence Surveyor genomics analysis system, which provides overview visualizations to elucidate large-scale patterns across multiple genome sequence alignments. Like genomes, texts can be thought of as distinct sequences of data. As bacteria strains can be distinguished by their DNA sequences, texts can be distinguished by their sequences of words. TextDNA visualizes sequences of text in parallel, allowing users to detect word usage patterns.

    Hannah Ackermans - 21.02.2016 - 08:49

  5. StoryWorld Authoring Tool (SWAT)

    The Storyworld Authoring Tool is to interactive storyworlds as, say, Adobe DreamWeaver is to websites. It is a big complicated program that allows an author to create, test, and edit a storyworld. 

    (source: http://www.erasmatazz.com/library/experimental-siboot-site/why-is-this-g...)

    Hannah Ackermans - 22.03.2016 - 15:53

  6. Prezi

    Prezi is a cloud-based presentation software based on a software as a service model. The product employs a zooming user interface (ZUI), which allows users to zoom in and out of their presentation media, and allows users to display and navigate through information within a 2.5D or parallax 3D space on the Z-axis. Prezi was officially established in April 2009 by co-founders Adam Somlai-Fischer, Peter Halacsy and Peter Arvai.

    (Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prezi)

    Hannah Ackermans - 23.03.2016 - 14:37

  7. Google Wave

    Google Wave is an internet application made by Google. Google describes Wave as an application which "lets you communicate and collaborate in real time". This means that Wave can be used for several people to edit a document at the same time, or for a group discussion. Waves can be used in a similar way to a forum, or just for emails and instant messaging between two or more people.
    To use Google Wave in some browsers like Internet Explorer, you have to install Google Chrome Frame. This makes Internet explorer behave like Google Chrome on the Wave website. This is needed because Internet Explorer does not have enough features for Wave to work: it does not have full HTML5 support.
    Google Wave was discontinued in 2010. It has been open sourced as Apache Wave.
    (source: https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Google_Wave)

     

    Hannah Ackermans - 24.03.2016 - 11:46