Northot from Words With Friends, not from Draw Something, has so vigorously spread online gameplay. Wordle, a short and sweet word game in which the player has six attempts to guess a five-letter word, hangman-style, is everywhere, leaving grids of green and yellow spots in its wake. It was created by software developer Josh Wardle, who wanted to come up with a game that his fellow crossword lover would enjoy playing during the crash. He then sent it to his WhatsApp family group and then gave it to everyone.
Like many, I fell in love with her charms last week. When it was released to the public in November, 90 people played it, but now hundreds of thousands are on it. I couldn’t get my first one, for some reason I thought “tiler” was a better choice than “tiger”, but I got the most recent one in three tries.
I have high hopes for Wordle, which may seem disproportionate for quick gameplay, but listen to me. This is not an era where good things are taken at face value. We are cynical, irritable and tired, and if there is a bad intention to read something, someone will cross it out until they decide they have found it. For now, Wordle seems to exist outside of that. A new puzzle appears only once a day. It doesn’t take much time, and in an attention economy built on the zombifying potential of endless scrolling or clicking, this seems like a generous gesture. The scarcity makes it more desirable – you don’t get tired of something so shy and withdrawn. The website is ad-free, there are no paid updates, there is no possibility of revealing an additional letter by shelling out cash. When Wardle noticed that people liked to discuss their results, he added a feature that allowed them to share their grids, hence green and yellow proliferated on social media like algae in a warm period.
That’s all about it. It’s simple, fun, satisfying, and free. Even his name, a nod to Wardle, is charming; even its origins – the New York Times called him “a love storyDescribing it as a closing gift from Wardle to his partner, they are incredibly sweet. I want to be a little cynical with Wordle, I want not to suspect anything, because at this moment, Wordle suggests that we can have nice things without breaking them.
Kim Kardashian: like her, I also despair over the fall of the BlackBerry
I bought my BlackBerry for the Reading festival, around the mid-2000s. Another writer, also there for the NMEHe had suggested that it would be a game changer: it meant no longer having to rush to a backstage booth to hastily write a review on a spare computer, if there was a spare one; instead, you could type while watching, with frantic thumbs. He left more time to drink pints from plastic cups and try to get someone from Foals to pose for a photo with a fake mustache. (Reader, they refused).
Just like at the reading festival, I put down the BlackBerry a long time ago, like a relic of youth. Soon after, the iPhone came along and swept away the practicality of the BlackBerry, the tempting touchscreen not great for typing anything at length, though in return it offered the ability to pretend your fingers were riding a skateboard or playing a piano. In hindsight, that could be the moment when everything started to go wrong.
However, the BlackBerry persisted. My favorite was Kim Kardashian, who knows a thing or two about platform monetization and maybe she knew something we don’t. Her tweeted his despair following the death of its BlackBerry Bold in 2016. But only last week, on January 4, 2022, after several death rattles and a series of false alarms, the BlackBerry finally got rid of this deadly coil, and the company ended support for your mobile devices, effectively killing most of them.
Is there a word for the specific wave of nostalgia that greets the demise of something that has long been out of date?
Betty White: farewell, the last and funniest of the Golden Girls
I have always held that The golden girls It’s dirtier, funnier, and more anarchic than most contemporary comedies could dream of and I treasure my DVD case as a comfort watch, style inspiration, and model for getting old. What a pleasure, then, to witness how people share their favorite Rose scenes online, after the death of Betty White, the last living Golden Girl, who died at the age of 99, a couple of weeks before her birthday. 100 years.
Many of the tributes highlighted White’s impeccable comic timing. It may not have been easy to play Rose, famous for being the goofy, against Blanche’s mischievous malice, Dorothy’s stern wit, or Sophia’s fabulously blunt manner, but White navigated through the genius of comedy, her sweetness a balance. perfect with all the acidity, one look from her just enough to send the audience into ecstasy.
He can’t help but wonder how White would have felt about Persons latest issue of the magazine, which was printed before the sad news broke, hitting newsstands with his face on the cover and the declaration of celebration, “Betty White turns 100!” In a certain light, it could be said that it looks like a finishing touch.
www.theguardian.com
George is Digismak’s reported cum editor with 13 years of experience in Journalism