We usually freak out at the idea that computer algorithms might tell us what to do. Yet we're constantly asking them for instructions: how to contact person X, find document Y, or move from point A to point B. We just pretend that we're in control. What if, instead, we made that submissive experience explicit, producing something unexpected -- and fun?
You see, e-books may not yet have their avant-garde, but mapping apps just might. Self-described artist/architect/post-disciplinary researcher Mark Shepard built his alternative navigation iPhone app Serendipitor (currently in public beta) to inject Google Maps with the ethos of postmodern participatory art movements like Fluxus or Situationism. But when you mash-up movement with art, you get something very much like an alternate reality game.
Here's Shepard's description of how Serendipitor works:
As it happens, this dovetails with "Reality Has A Gaming Layer," a terrific article published yesterday by game designer Kevin Slavin for O'Reilly Radar. Essentially, Slavin argues that mobile applications like Foursquare, virtual games like Second Life, simulated-reality objects like the Tamagotchi, and casual games like Farmville or Parking Wars are converging with the "big games" -- essentially, games that require extensive play in the real world -- that he and other designers have been working on for years.
What we've been creating, as we've taken these gadgets out of our office and living rooms and brought them with us into the world, are experiences that blend information, entertainment, and interaction. When you're taking a photograph or looking up a map on your smartphone, you're really waving around a video game controller. Serendipitor might be the perfect example of that.
(out of the) wayfinding with serendipitor [Serial Consign] via Nav Alang/@scrawledinwax
See Also:
- E-Books Are Still Waiting for Their Avant-Garde
- New ARG Tasks You With Tracking Down Mythical Canadian Creatures ...
- New ARG Mixes Beer, Bill Murray and Hipster-Eating Dinosaurs ...
- Conspiracy for Good: A Recap of an ARG by the Creator of Heroes ...
- Secret Websites, Coded Messages: The New World of Immersive Games
- Mobile Devices Need Custom Maps
- Google Maps Finally Adds Bike Routes





