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	<title>
	Comments on: Introducing Texture	</title>
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	<description>Interactive Fiction by Juhana Leinonen</description>
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		<title>
		By: Mudakun		</title>
		<link>/blog/2014/11/introducing-texture/comment-page-1/#comment-16305</link>

		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Mudakun]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 07 Jan 2015 22:09:49 +0000</pubDate>
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					<description><![CDATA[N00b here, knocked flat after stumbling upon certain IF/ games and now fired up with a strange compulsion. Finding out about what can be done with Twine and other hypertext html authoring tools causes me to have a powerful urge to see how they would deploy on a $30 &quot;android tv box system&quot; (ebay your friend) stuck in say, public spaces and/ or art galleries. Because they need to be there. And because one could run cables, load a browser into kiosk mode on a desktop and hide the box and all the cables to the nice big black screen on the wall, but it would be a real bear to set up, and would cost more than $30-40. A web search of gallery presentation of IF / games seems to indicate that presentation is clunky and not very sleek. This can be fixed. I am surprised it hasn&#039;t already. Perhaps I am wrong and am trying to re-invent the wheel and everyone who does Twine seriously already knows this trick? If not..
Thanks for your blog writings
/M]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>N00b here, knocked flat after stumbling upon certain IF/ games and now fired up with a strange compulsion. Finding out about what can be done with Twine and other hypertext html authoring tools causes me to have a powerful urge to see how they would deploy on a $30 "android tv box system" (ebay your friend) stuck in say, public spaces and/ or art galleries. Because they need to be there. And because one could run cables, load a browser into kiosk mode on a desktop and hide the box and all the cables to the nice big black screen on the wall, but it would be a real bear to set up, and would cost more than $30-40. A web search of gallery presentation of IF / games seems to indicate that presentation is clunky and not very sleek. This can be fixed. I am surprised it hasn't already. Perhaps I am wrong and am trying to re-invent the wheel and everyone who does Twine seriously already knows this trick? If not..<br />
Thanks for your blog writings<br />
/M</p>
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