- Most people with iPhones have become familiar with the Scrabble-like game Words With Friends. Some people use the app to pass time, others play just for fun, while others use it to save lives. Yes, save lives. (YAHOO!)
- Summary: Vowels, vowels, and more vowels! Is anyone else out there noticing an increase in vowel-dealt hands in Words with Friends? I sure am, and so are many of those I play with. (ZDNet)
- (Newser) – A man in Australia is thanking his lucky stars his wife has a penchant for word games. A few years back, Georgie Fletcher began battling an international opponent shed never met: Missouri resident Beth Legler. (Newser)
- A Words With Friends game between two women that live across the world from each other, recently saved the life of an Australian man with heart problems. Words With Friends is an app available for Apple products that is similar to Scrabble. (Kentucky Post)
- I just got my first smartphone a few weeks ago. And one of the first things I downloaded, after the NPR app of course, was Words With Friends. (NPR News)
- Zyngas motto is connecting the world through games. Turns out its games do exactly that. This time Zynga connected the wife of a doctor with a man who had symptoms of heart disease through Words With Friends, one of Zyngas most popular games. (The Business Insider)
- Scramble With Friends is a made-for-mobile game where players compete against opponents to beat the clock and find as many words as possible on the game board. (Yahoo Finance)
- For some of us, the best we can hope to get out of playing Words With Friends is a respectable score. Megan Lawless and Jasper Jasperse, however, fared just a bit better. (Time)
- "I look forward to seeing how they interpret what social music means as we seem to have different core philosophies about it (such as the importance of discovering new music from strangers and not just friends). (ZDNet)
- Zynga launched its second new game in two days Thursday, seeking to move past its disappointing IPO with the biggest new-game-launch cycle in its history, according to CEO Mark Pincus. (San Jose Mercury News)
Friday, January 13, 2012
Words with friends
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