25
Sep
Minesweeper and Solitaire - the hidden education from the
misunderstood demon
When people first started using GUI's (Graphical user
interfaces), they needed something that will help them easily pick
up the basic functions of something that modern PC users take for
granted; the mouse. This is where Minesweeper and Solitaire reared
its ugly, counter-productive head...
Invented by Robert Donner and Curt Johnson, two Microsoft
employees, Minesweeper has been installed with every Microsoft
Windows since Windows 3.1 in March 1992 and has been used to waste
time in offices all over the globe. Minesweeper, for those estate
agents who are unsure, is a game where a tiled board hides 'mines',
that when clicked on, end the game. The aim of the game is to left
click on all the spaces between the mines and 'flag' (by right
clicking) possible mines.
The roots of Solitaire's history cannot be exactly pinpointed.
It is known to have become popular in France around the 19th
Century and then spread to the UK and the US in the end of that
century. Again, for those estate agents who are unsure, the aim of
Solitaire is to sort 7 increasing sizes of card piles (the first
pile containing 1 card to the 7th pile containing 7cards) into the
4 different suits in ascending order with the remaining deck of
cards.
Countless office hours have been whittled away on these games.
In fact in 2006, one man was fired by the Mayor of New York City
(Michael Bloomberg) after he saw an open game of Solitaire on the
man's work computer. But was the purpose of these two games to
reduce the worldwide productivity? One article entitled 'The most successful game ever: a history of
Minesweeper' suggests not.
The article suggests that the two games were intentionally built
to train or educate users to fully utilise the mouse. Minesweeper
was designed to help users master the point-and-click element
(users have to point and click to a particular square they believe
to be a space or a mine) and solitaire was designed so that users
could become skilled at dragging and dropping cards from one point
of the screen to another. Both of these functions are now used in
everyday for clicking on buttons or dragging and dropping files
from one place to another.
Even today these basic functions are used in modern estate agent
websites. Take the example of embedded and enhanced Google maps on
one of Resource Techniques estate agent websites:

Users and estate agents use the point-and-click function to not
only choose the local amenities that they want displayed but also
to click on a house that they will be interested in. They also use
the drag and drop function to navigate around the Google map to see
the houses for sale in the surrounding area. Functions like these
are integrated into everyday life without users and estate agents
even realising. Maybe the next time you are on an estate agent
website and using enhanced Google maps, you'll think of Minesweeper
and Solitaire.
Troy Stanley, CTO of Resource Techniques
comments, 'Point and click and drag and drop is now second nature
to users.'
Troy Stanley continues, Simplistic features,
like the enhanced Google Maps with local amenities on estate agent
websites, are completely user friendly. Users are able to view a
properties location and surrounding points of reference in Map,
Satellite and Hybrid view from a simple click.
'An Estate agent website hosting online properties has evolved.
They are no longer a long list of properties with limited amount of
information; they are places where users can users can view high
resolution photos, receive email alerts, print high quality
property particulars in a pdf format, see embedded EPCs and HIPs
and even view from the property from a satellite to viewing it on
the street.' - Troy Stanley.
Resource Techniques specialises in web sites for estate agents, including website design for estate agents, Search Engine Optimisation (SEO) for estate
agents and in-house software for estate agents. contact us on our Twitter
profile, Facebook Page or through our contact page. Resource Techniques also provides a free,
no obligations website review.
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