enlarging the vocabulary via Scrabulous

January 20, 2008

I began by playing the robot at the Scrabulous site. That was certainly an eye-opening and degrading experience as it quickly racked up huge scores using words I’d never heard of. I was used to family games where we never bothered to keep score.

Over the course of many humiliating losses, I began to consult the online dictionary that comes with Scrabulous. Faced with either all vowels or all consonants, one gets a little desperate against an unseen, highly superior opponent who has access to an enormous vocabulary of obscure words. I never thought of it as ‘cheating’. During family games, we automatically google if someone comes up with a questionable word.

Since three of my Facebook fellow players are from across the pond, they produce words from time to time that are unfamiliar to me, but which I accept without question. It’s all for fun, after all. They do talk funny over there. But then I guess so do we.

But I would never call consulting a dictionary cheating. This particular one does not allow the word ‘toga’, for example, which is puzzling.

Nevertheless, it will be interesting to follow the progress of the Hasbro lawsuit against Scrabulous.

the Mac Book Air, the iPhone, the 17″ MacBook Pro

I’m sure there were many preorders for the MacBook Air soon after it was announced. For a few minutes I thought about doing it myself. Such is the power of hype. Now that things have settled down a bit, some, like Paul Boutin at Slate, are saying the Air should have some of the features of the iPhone, including its ability to access the web with tremendous ease.

My old G4 Powerbook is showing its age. I need something that will process my ever-increasing photo processing needs, so I’m going with the 17″ MacBook Pro. The smaller screen of the Air would mean I would have to spring for a separate monitor. Don’t want to lug around a monitor from room to room.