my favorite is the original star wars on the pdp-1.
i think it came from lincoln labs, but i played it
in 1965-1966 at stanford.
a very good replica was done on unix by dmr.
On Sun, Dec 8, 2019 at 6:03 PM Rob Pike <robpike(a)gmail.com> wrote:
My favorite (other than Nuke the Smileys) was written at the UofT by Hugh Redelmeier. It
was a version of tic-tac-toe that played only a single line, and would always win. If it
didn't like your move, it changed it. If your move was a good one, it would change
its previous move. And it did this with lovely little messages. It was fun watching people
get upset at it.
I don't know where the source is nowadays. I may have it somewhere, or it might be
ferric dust long since swept up from a cupboard of failed 9-track tapes.
-rob
On Mon, Dec 9, 2019 at 11:47 AM Adam Thornton <athornton(a)gmail.com> wrote:
>
>
>
> > On Dec 8, 2019, at 5:35 PM, Ken Thompson via TUHS <tuhs(a)minnie.tuhs.org>
wrote:
> >
> > in the early 70s, noone had seen a computer.
> > i had a terminal at home and we were giving
> > a dinner party. i wrote several games for the
> > party from the back of an off-the-shelf puzzle
> > book.
> >
> > the ones i remember:
> >
> > moo (bulls + cows)
> > hunt the wumpus (move or shoot)
> > learning tic-tac-toe
> > i can guess your number (divide and conquer)
> > jealous husbands (similar to fox hen corn)
> > nim
> >
> > i think there were more. they went over
> > pretty well at the party.
> >
> > i think this was 1969 or 1970.
>
>
> Clarification, please.
>
> Was “Hunt the Wumpus” from the back of an off-the-shelf puzzle book? I thought it
was by Gregory Yob (per the Creative Computing BASIC Computer Games book—Wumpus may have
been in More BASIC Computer Games), and, well, it’s about dodecahedronal geometry, which
seems as if it would only have been found in a rather rarefied puzzle book, but does seem
like the sort of Platonic solid a computer-programming nerd in the early 1970s would have
known about.
>
> Adam