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Dec
22

Where (and how) to play Mahjong online

Free MahjongIf you've not heard of Mahjong (or Mahjongg as its sometimes called) it's one of the most popular casual games on the Internet - as big as Solitaire.

Believed to have been invented hundreds of years ago in China, the modern version of the game is similar to Solitaire but uses unique playing tiles, and has different gameplay. It's an intellectual challenge (but not overbearing) and fun.

The object of the game is to clear a 3D pyramid of tiles by matching tiles with one another. You click on one tile, you click on a matching tile and the pair disappears.

Sounds simple enough, but not every matching tile is clickable. You can only click tiles that are able to slide towards the left or the right. Also they cannot be covered by other tiles. This is the least you need to know.

A subtlety is that 'Flower' tiles do not have to exactly match one another (there's 4 of them), and the same goes for 'Seasons' tiles which are sometimes depicted as 4 farmers.

There are many free online versions of Mahjong, but most are over-run with advertising. More links than you could ever want to know can be found here, or, more simply there is a new, excellent version of Mahjong from the Free Video Games Project called simply Free Mahjong.

Enjoy!

Dec
13

The Story of the 1st Chemistry Rave

The kind folks at Communc8ter have asked me to continue my stories about the early Chemistry parties. As with all their articles, the story is posted exactly 18 years on from the day it happened.

Here's the story of the very Chemistry rave, and how it nearly happened two years earlier, were it not for some unexpected attention from the mob...

The story of the 1st Chemistry Rave

Dec
10

Facebook Privacy Guide - In 2 Minutes

facebook-guide-thumb.gifI've written this predominantly for friends and associates who might not be so tapped into all the recent tech scene coverage over Facebook's new Privacy changes.

If you've skipped past the new Privacy notice that has appeared recently on Facebook and haven't had time to read their new Privacy Guide, you need to read this.

The really short version is that accepting Facebook's new 'recommended' privacy settings will mean all your future status updates and posted photos will be available to the general public. That means prospective employers.

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