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posted by CoolHand on Tuesday May 19 2015, @07:38PM   Printer-friendly
from the inferior-to-pysol dept.

The built-in Windows games are a cultural phenomenon, and while the lineup has varied over the years, one game above all has come to define workplace boredom and Windows' ability to be there for you when you have nothing better to do: Solitaire.

sol.exe was first included with Windows in 1990's release of Windows 3.0. Since its introduction, its distinctive green baize has been the hallmark of the bored white-collar employee. Gaze across a sea of cubicles, and the presence of Solitaire, immediately visible even at a distance, will instantly reveal workspace slacking. The distracting time waster has probably single-handedly offset all the productivity gains that computers have enabled.

May 22 will be Windows 3.0's 25th birthday, and to celebrate Microsoft is running a Solitaire tournament. It's not immediately clear to me how you run a tournament for a single-player, non-competitive, randomized game where only around 80 percent of games are even theoretically winnable, but why not. Currently Redmond is running an internal competition, and on June 5 it'll be made public. The company promises that its best Solitaire experts will go "head-to-head" with the public.

http://arstechnica.com/gadgets/2015/05/microsoft-celebrates-25-years-of-wasting-time-at-work-with-solitaire-tournament/

 
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  • (Score: 1) by kurenai.tsubasa on Wednesday May 20 2015, @04:54AM

    by kurenai.tsubasa (5227) on Wednesday May 20 2015, @04:54AM (#185308) Journal

    Some of us prefer playing solitaire with real cards and don't mind the various computer versions?

    Does that make me a hipster? I was playing solitaire before it was implemented in a GUI? Playing the GUI version before it was cool? I don't get it.