The full title was "Algorithm: Recreational Programming".
I have only 4 issues of this quarterly magazine from the early 1990s. The rest seem nowhere to be found online, at least so far as my efforts. Each issue was a unique 'deep-dive' into topics only scratched by the articles in Scientific American's 'Mathematical Recreations' and, later, 'Computer Recreations'.
Does anyone else have issues? We need to group any extant copies together and digitize them for www.archive.org. Please contact me if you have any issues.
I contacted the University of Waterloo's CS department back in 2016, and they stated they had contacted Dr. Dewdney himself about it but I never heard back so I think it's up to us, the internet at large, to preserve this unique snapshot of the hobbyist/enthusiast computer scientist era.
But if the reload is triggered by a form submit to an iframe (thus staying on the page) with a timed call to window.reload(), the page resets to the top. Not so in Firefox.
Remember, Go is MIT-licensed. If things become too bound to Google, it can and will be forked. People thought it was the end of the world when multiple Java SDKs arose didn't they? (Not to say that didn't hurt Java, but the language survived).
Yes, yes it is. That will force open hardware specs, right-to-repair, limit damaging DRM, and encourage competitive software and hardware markets. And even multiple software stores, if that's what the market wants.
warehouse23.com/basement and its higher levels was a great timesink... SJgames put a minimal version back online recently, but it no longer allows new box submissions and seems to have lost a lot of the old content.
I have only 4 issues of this quarterly magazine from the early 1990s. The rest seem nowhere to be found online, at least so far as my efforts. Each issue was a unique 'deep-dive' into topics only scratched by the articles in Scientific American's 'Mathematical Recreations' and, later, 'Computer Recreations'.
Does anyone else have issues? We need to group any extant copies together and digitize them for www.archive.org. Please contact me if you have any issues.
I contacted the University of Waterloo's CS department back in 2016, and they stated they had contacted Dr. Dewdney himself about it but I never heard back so I think it's up to us, the internet at large, to preserve this unique snapshot of the hobbyist/enthusiast computer scientist era.