The Origin of the Oregon Trail Computer Game

I’d be willing to bet that 95% of elementary school students in the ’80s and ’90s played some version of the Oregon Trail. I have a copy on my iPad that pales in comparison to the version made for the Apple IIe or IIgs (I don’t remember. It was a looooong time ago.) I can still remember being disappointed when no deer or buffalo appeared while hunting and I lost a day for nothing. Or even worse, someone died from dysentery, or I hit a rock in the Columbia River (that was always the best way to finish). Think back to the good ol’ days while you read about the origins of this great game.

Think back to your first interactions with a computer. What were you doing? Probably not browsing the Internet, writing emails, or even typing in a word document. For many kids, video games and educational software came first, and that holds true as far back as the 1970s…continue reading

Des Moines Tops List Of The Best Places For Business And Careers

This is why we live here:

Last week’s jobs report for July showed unemployment dropping from 7.6% to 7.4%, which marks the lowest rate since December 2008. Good times, right? Not exactly. The rate fell in part because more and more Americans have ceased looking for work…continue reading

EduPunks’ Atlas Sorts Free Online and Offline Educational Resources

Never stop learning. I can’t wait to combine this with other online educational tools like Khan Academy, et al.

We live in a wonderful time when free, open education is abundant. The EduPunks’ Atlas and its accompanying guide are a great resource for exploring your DIY education possibilities. The Atlas “maps” organizations that provide online, offline, or a combination of courses…continue reading

It Doesn’t Matter If It’s Someone Else’s Fault

Trent is spot on with this one. As I constantly remind my kids, you control your own attitude. You may not be able to control the circumstances, but what defines you as a person is how you deal with them.

It doesn’t matter that some other driver damaged your car. It doesn’t matter that some evil boss caused you to lose your job or office politics have kept you from being promoted. It doesn’t matter that life seems to keep you from getting ahead…continue reading (via The Simple Dollar)

All the New Stuff in IFTTT for iOS, and What You Can Do with It

I’m a big fan of IFTTT (IF This Then That), beginning with the number of channels available on their website and continuing on to the constant updates and innovation. Now the iOS app adds a whole new level of integration.

I know Dropbox (in the example below) has an auto-upload feature in iOS, but it’s all or nothing. IFTTT allows you to define what happens when you take photos, sending some to Dropbox and some to other services. It’s completely customizable.

Here’s the thing: I’m happy with the way most of the services IFTTT integrates with work on their own. IFTTT just makes them that much better.

The If This Then That iOS app was released a few weeks ago, and people have had plenty of time to create some clever recipes that integrate the new iOS-specific features. The iOS app extends the experience of IFTTT more than you might think. Here’s everything you can do with it….continue reading.

The $4 Million Teacher

It seems the best and brightest go into just about any field other than teaching. That’s not a knock on teachers. It’s the truth about the people with brains following the money. Can you blame them? Make education a profitable private enterprise instead of subsistence living and you’ll see the difference in the quality of graduates.

Kim Ki-hoon earns $4 million a year in South Korea, where he is known as a rock-star teacher—a combination of words not typically heard in the rest of the world. Mr. Kim has been teaching for over 20 years, all of them in the country’s private, after-school tutoring academies, known as hagwons….continue reading (via NextDraft)

Teach Yourself Programming in Ten Years

This is my problem with learning to code: I want to be fluent tomorrow. I want to make something now. I don’t want to be good in 10 years…see below.

Why is everyone in such a rush? Walk into any bookstore, and you’ll see how to Teach Yourself Java in 7 Days alongside endless variations offering to teach Visual Basic, Windows, the Internet, and so on in a few days or hours. I did the following power search at Amaz…continue reading (via NextDraft)