ModIT Workshop: Online HTML Game Engine/Creation Tool
MIT Building 32 (Stata Center), Room 124 32 Vassar Street, Cambridge, MAModit is currently in private beta but in this workshop, we will showcase our HTML5 game development.
Modit is currently in private beta but in this workshop, we will showcase our HTML5 game development.
The Festival of Learning is a two-day festival, where anyone from MIT's Media Lab buildings (E14 and E15) can teach, learn, and collaborate!
A glimpse into contemporary short film productions from European film schools, young and established independent filmmakers, and European festivals.
We'll explore how instructors can break down assignments to demystify research, writing, and presentation in their fields.
Participants will learn the basic stitches, knit and purl, and other skills to make their first project.
What kind of feedback will help students understand how to revise their essays, reports or articles, or to write their next assignment more effectively?
This interactive workshop is geared to instructors across the disciplines who are interested in integrating oral presentation into their classes
In this hands-on workshop you'll learn how to create, tag, link, and share annotations in web-based environments.
Join us at 8am on October 3, 2013, here at cms.mit.edu!
Join us at 2pm on October 31, 2013, here at cms.mit.edu!
Students who attend will form teams and create design and technical prototypes that will eventually become full fledged games by the end of the month.
The Global Game Jam is the world’s largest game jam event taking place around the world at physical locations, a 48-hour a hackathon focused on game development.
The mostly-female cast is generally portrayed as being extremely competent and working collectively to solve problems, even as the films fall back on formulaic personality conflicts.
Let's talk about the impact of computation on the humanities, about where it can takes us, and about what it means to use this lens on our scholarship. And who's doing what where in DH at MIT?
"A knitting pattern is actually a more or less complex algorithm with the difference being that the output is directly wearable like 3D printing."