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World Of Goo Birthday Sale Final Results: America Represent [2D Boy]...up your price averages. On October 13th, developer 2D Boy launched a birthday sale for World of Goo for the PC, Linux, and Mac, allowing customers to pay whatever amount they felt the game was worth, from $.01 on up. On the 20th they extended... In this article: World of Goo, Linux, Norway, Switzerland, Brazil, and United States |
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Crave: The gadget blog | October 23, 2009
Buy World of Goo (PC/Mac/Linux) for whatever price you want
...honestly not sure what the game is worth, download the demo before you pick a number. World of Goo is available for Windows, Mac, and even Linux systems. I'll admit I wasn't familiar with the game when I heard about this promotion, but it's...
In this article: World of Goo, CBS Interactive, RSS Feed, Potato, BNET, Itunes, CNET, and Twitter
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Kotaku | October 13, 2009
Name Your Price For World Of Goo []
...this whole post to another site World of Goo turns one-year-old today, and 2D Boy celebrates by letting you buy the PC, Mac, and Linux version of the game for whatever you think it's worth - even a penny! From now until October 19th,...
In this article: Jack Black, World of Goo, Brutal Legend, Dragon Age: Origins, BioWare, and USA Today
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Kotaku | February 14, 2009
World of Goo Arrives on Linux [World Of Goo]
...promised by 2D Boy, they can now start playing acclaimed indie puzzler World of Goo. The developers have also talked about the challenge of Linux porting. The game is $20, DRM-free and supports 64-bit systems. A demo version featuring the...
In this article: World of Goo, Ubuntu, Pulse Audio, and Linux gamers
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Evri Blog | December 10, 2008
World Of Goo
...we all care about. So, if you like World Of Goo, you will love Evri. World of Goo is DRM free, available for Mac OS X, Windows, Linux, and the Wii, and it's only $20. This entry was posted on Wednesday, December 10th, 2008 at 2:35 pm and...
In this article: Evri, World of Goo, Wii, Goo balls, Lemmings, Mac OS X, and Tim Burton
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BBC News | March 13, 2009
New era dawns for game makers
'No constraint' One of the closest things the indie games scene has had to a Blair Witch is World of Goo, a deceptively simply puzzle game that has become a breakout hit on PC, Mac, Linux and the Nintendo Wii. Made by two...
In this article: Facebook, Iphone, Microsoft, Blair Witch Project, App Store, Kongregate.com, Xbox, Nintendo Wii, and Poker
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Coding Horror | December 27, 2008
My Software Is Being Pirated
...EULA. Michael Herold on December 27, 2008 06:03 AM World of Goo is really fun, when I saw they had a Mac and Linux versions as well it was a no-brainer, I had to support that. One thing I would recommend the developers is to drop the...
In this article: World of Goo, Bill Gates, Microsoft, World of Warcraft, Steam, Pirate Bay, PayPal, and Adobe
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IndieGames.com - The Weblog | February 13, 2009
Linux Gets the Goo
...available to download for Linux users. If you have already purchased the game from the 2D Boy site when only Windows and Mac were available, it is now possible to get the Linux edition free of charge. If you still haven't given World of Goo...
In this article: World of Goo and Info
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Computerworld Breaking News | December 29, 2008
Image gallery: Office bling for '09
...programming interface. Starts at $199. (Click for details.) "AIR on Linux has arrived and it works well, once you get it to work at all and if you..." Read more... High-tech titans from Red Hat, Adobe, Cisco and more admit: All they...
In this article: Cisco, World of Goo, and Red Hat
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IndieGames.com - The Weblog | March 25, 2009
Polytron Release Second Fez Trailer
...are my cup of tea. Posted by: Anonymous | March 25, 2009 2:28 PM I might even buy this one if there's no Linux version (assuming the Wine guys get it running.) I can't imagine it'll show up on WiiWare like World of Goo did because...
In this article: World of Goo, Super Paper Mario, and Nintendo
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Description from Wikipedia:
Linux (commonly pronounced: /ˈlɪnʌks/, in English, also pronounced: /ˈlɪnʊks/, Torvalds has made available an audio sample with his pronunciation in English (IPA: //ˈlɪnʊks//: ) and in Swedish (IPA: //ˈlɪːnɤks//: ) is a generic term referring to Unix-like computer operating systems based on the Linux kernel. Their development is one of the most prominent examples of free and open source software collaboration; typically all the underlying source code can be used, freely modified, and redistributed, both commercially and non-commercially, by anyone under the terms of the GNU GPL.
Linux is predominantly known for its use in servers, although can be installed on a wide variety of computer hardware, ranging from embedded devices, mobile phones and even some watches to supercomputers. Linux distributions, installed on both desktop and laptop computers, have become increasingly commonplace in recent years, partly owing to the popular Ubuntu distribution and the emergence of netbooks.
The name "Linux" comes from the Linux kernel, originally written in 1991 by Linus Torvalds. The rest of the system usually comprises components such as the Apache HTTP Server, the X Window System, the GNOME and KDE desktop environments, and utilities and libraries from the GNU Project (announced in 1983 by Richard Stallman). Commonly-used applications with desktop Linux systems include the Mozilla Firefox web-browser and the OpenOffice.org office application suite. The GNU contribution is the basis for the Free Software Foundation's preferred name GNU/Linux.
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