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posted by LaminatorX on Sunday August 16 2015, @07:42PM   Printer-friendly
from the wax-on-wax-off dept.

conspiracy-theories dept.

If you haven't ever played Solitaire, Minesweeper, Hearts or FreeCell, it's safe to say you're in the minority. These simple Windows games have probably caused more lost worker hours than anything short of a worldwide coffee shortage. Whichever one was your favorite, the temptation to take just one more go at beating them—to get a faster time or a better score—was hard to ignore.

But as fun as these games were, they weren't actually designed for entertainment. At least not in their Windows incarnations.

The oldest of the four, Microsoft Solitaire, was first added to Windows 3.0 in 1990. Although the game (sometimes called "Patience") has existed since the late 1700s, this digital version seemed to be demonstrating that in the future we would no longer require a physical deck to play simple card games. But that's not what it was doing at all. Its real aim was far more modest: it was teaching mouse-fluency by stealth.

The intention was that Solitaire would get a generation of computer users still most familiar with a command-line input to teach themselves how to drag and drop, without realizing that's what they were doing. The fact that we're still dragging and dropping today suggests that it worked rather well.

http://mentalfloss.com/uk/technology/32106/the-true-purpose-of-solitaire-minesweeper-hearts-and-freecell

It is highly probable that SN members were aware of the true purpose of these games but the article seemed interesting nevertheless.


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  • (Score: 4, Interesting) by number6 on Sunday August 16 2015, @10:47PM

    by number6 (1831) on Sunday August 16 2015, @10:47PM (#223661) Journal

    If you type the word Edutainment into Wikipedia you will be redirected to a page titled Educational entertainment [wikipedia.org].
    Further reading will lead you to a page titled Educational game [wikipedia.org], which is a subcategory of the above.

    After reading those Wikipedia pages, I fail to see any insight or conspiracy theories in the article linked at the summary [mentalfloss.com].

    --

    If anyone here wants to improve their typing skill or learn how to type while playing a fun interactive video game, I highly recommend The Typing Of The Dead [wikipedia.org].
    It's an old game from the early 2000s and should run easily on any old or new Windows OS. I've got a "Rip" of the program files on my hard drive archived as ZIP.
    If you want a copy for yourself, go here: Download Typing of the Dead Torrent - Kickass Torrents [kat.cr]

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