Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Quick, Draw! is an online guessing game developed and published by Google LLC that challenges players to draw a picture of an object or idea and then uses a neural network artificial intelligence to guess what the drawings represent. [2] [3] [4] The AI learns from each drawing, improving its ability to guess correctly in the future. [3]
Each player gets a turn as the "artist", in which they draw a word or phrase while the other players attempt to guess it. The artist can use a mouse or graphics tablet to draw, and is given a set of on-screen drawing tools including pens, brushes, an eraser, a fill tool, and a color palette. When another player successfully guesses the word or ...
There are two modes in the game: Draw & Guess Classic mode and You Draw – We Guess mode. [2] In Draw & Guess Classic mode, each player is given a subject in words and must express what it is by drawing it. [4] When it was finished, it will be passed on the next player. The next player must guess what it is, and the word will be passed on the ...
Broken Picture Telephone was created by American indie developer Alishah Novin in 2007. [1] After Jay Is Games published a review of the game in June of that year, the influx of new players temporarily overwhelmed the BrokenPictureTelephone.com servers even though the game had been migrated to new servers in anticipation of such an increase in site visitors. [4]
Draw Something was a video game developed by OMGPop based on its browser game Draw My Thing, [1] launched on February 6, 2012. [2] It won a Flurry App Spotlight Award in 2012. [ 3 ] In the first five weeks after its launching, the game was downloaded 20 million times. [ 4 ]
A trichrome map-coloring game in progress, on a map of the United States. On their turn, a player may choose any of the three colors to shade an unshaded state, so long as it would not share a color with a bordering state. Three states have become unshadeable, being surrounded by all three colors.
Sketchpad ran on the MIT Lincoln Laboratory TX-2 (1958) computer at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), which had 64k of 36-bit words.The user drew on the computer monitor screen with the recently invented light pen, which relayed information on its position by computing at what time the light from the scanning cathode-ray tube screen is detected.
Digital painting is the creation of imagery on a computer, using pixels (picture elements) which are assigned a color. The process uses raster graphics rather than vector graphics , and can render graduated or blended colors in imagery which mimics traditional drawing and painting media.