we'll use NT for the screen computer (and i guess for the moo/coolTalk one
too). the audience laptops will be running w95, i think, but to be sure we
should ask Anne from ARS.
>and if I manage to be familiar with them at the day of the workshop - so
>installing them on the machines and using them seems easy :)
i think they're quite easy to use. the one Jim proposed has a big
disadvantege: it's quite big (4 Mb compressed!), so i think we should get
another one. i downloaded another for windoye (MUTT Light) and it's only 78
k (which makes me wonder...). problem is i can't test it here at the igw
'cos the PCs have passwords and it's 5:40 am and i'm alone in here, so i'll
tell you if it works tomorrow.
Jim/Juli: you have more experience on this than us. maybe you can suggest a
small (should fit on a diskette) MOOclient for windoze computers in Linz.
for macs i guess we'll be using MUDDweller (i tested MacMOOse and it seems
ok, but i think it's main advantages are when editing things & programming,
and people will not be doing that, i guess).
i think we can put a link to the clients from our website for MOO audience
to get. my opinion there is to put two or three of each so people can
choose and decide, but to have some kind of 'description'.
Juli: i found a Java MOO client (re: after this madness). maybe we can
contact the people that programmed it so we can have everything on one
screen... and have everything 'connected' (MOO client calling new screens
on another frame, perhaps responding to the choros-click, etc...) i think
if we combine all our ideas + the knowledge some of you have on this
subjects (Aaron writing a parser for some weird MOO room you + Jim may
build...) we'll have the world in our hands.
the adress for this Java MOO is http://www.drscc.com/mudslide/index.html
saludos dormidos,
la m=FAsica es silencio vestido.
santi=E1go
http://www.geocities.com/~yaco (nueva versi=F3n)