This site was built for a client of ours (I work for a company called Orajen - http://www.orajen.com). The client goes around and takes pictures of things that look like letters and then lets you assemble a word from their letter collection. There are other sites / companies out there that do the same thing but I think our work is the best of the bunch.
The design work is not mine (it was done by our in house designer), I was 'merely' the developer on the project. The site is built in ASP.NET / c# and the client side stuff leverages scriptaculous. The shopping cart was built in house by me for this project.
There have been hundreds of hours put into this project and I have a lot of pride in the work so I wanted to show it off a little :)
Yeah, this is absolutely nothing new and EA have done it before. Burnout Paradise, released in 2008, had dynamic advertising billboards that were updated via the internet and targeted people based on location and what EA knew about them from their profile. It was particularly notable for the fact that the Obama presidential campaign ran ads in the game, in an attempt to reach a younger audience who didn't watch broadcast TV any more. It was by no means the first though. Battlefield 2142 from 2006 had the same thing. In fact, Neowin wrote a story about it back then.
https://www.neowin.net/news/ba...-in-game-ads-clarification/
This is obviously aimed at the education where Apple has lost so much ground to Chromebooks in the last few years, but unless they come up with a comparable management system for education why would anyone switch back?
MSN defined our generation in some ways, kind of like Snapchat and TikTok have done for future generations.
I have great memories of the MSN era in the late 90s / early 2000s. In the UK everyone seemed to come home from School and go on MSN for the evening. We didn't really have mobile phones then, so other than going and knocking on your friends door it was a totally new way of interacting with people. I also loved how I could talk to people I’d met playing online games from around the world.
Inviting people to NetMeeting and messing about with the shared white board and webcams was pretty fun, even if webcams only ran at a couple of fps over dial-up.
All the random things you could do with MsgPlus! were really fun - I suspect that made a few people jump with /shello randomly blasting Mr Hankey out their speakers!
Maybe I’m just nostalgic, however I do feel the internet and computers were more fun back then.
Question
clonk
I thought you might be interested to check out the site I made that launched this evening.
http://www.letter-photo.com
This site was built for a client of ours (I work for a company called Orajen - http://www.orajen.com). The client goes around and takes pictures of things that look like letters and then lets you assemble a word from their letter collection. There are other sites / companies out there that do the same thing but I think our work is the best of the bunch.
The design work is not mine (it was done by our in house designer), I was 'merely' the developer on the project. The site is built in ASP.NET / c# and the client side stuff leverages scriptaculous. The shopping cart was built in house by me for this project.
There have been hundreds of hours put into this project and I have a lot of pride in the work so I wanted to show it off a little :)
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