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bureaucratic maze - vertaling naar spaans

1973 VIDEO GAME
Maze wars; Maze-war; The maze game; Maze war; Mazewar; Maze Wars; User:PresN/maze; Maze War
  • alt=Large mainframe computer
  • alt=Computer with keyboard and monitor on top

bureaucratic maze      
laberinto burocrático
Maze         
COMUNA FRANCESA
Maze
----
* método Maze = Maze method.
maze         
  • Maze at [[Missouri Botanical Garden]] in St. Louis
  • A [[hedge maze]] at [[Longleat]] stately home in [[England]]
  • A small maze with one entrance and one exit. This is an example of a fair design for a walking maze, but a poor design for a paper-tracing maze.
  • Public maze at [[Wild Adventures]] theme park, [[Valdosta, Georgia]], United States. It was removed before the 2010 season.
PUZZLE GAME IN THE FORM OF A COMPLEX BRANCHING PASSAGE
Mazes; Rat maze; Lab maze
laberinto

Definitie

maze
I. n.
1.
Labyrinth, meander, intricacy, winding course.
2.
Intricacy, perplexity, bewilderment, embarrassment, uncertainty, mizmaze.
II. v. a.
Bewilder, amaze, confuse, perplex confound.

Wikipedia

Maze (1973 video game)

Maze, also known as Maze War, is a 3D multiplayer first-person shooter maze game originally developed in 1973 and expanded in 1974. The first version was developed by high school students Steve Colley, Greg Thompson, and Howard Palmer for the Imlac PDS-1 minicomputer during a school work/study program at the NASA Ames Research Center. By the end of 1973 the game featured shooting elements and could be played on two computers connected together. After Thompson began school at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), he brought the game to the school's computer science laboratory in February 1974, where he and Dave Lebling expanded it into an eight-player game using the school's Digital Equipment Corporation PDP-10 minicomputer and PDS-1 terminals along with adding scoring, top-down map views, and a level editor. Other programmers at MIT improved this version of the game, which was also playable between people at different universities over the nascent ARPANET. Due to the popularity of the game, laboratory managers at MIT both played it while also trying to restrict its use due to the large amount of time students were spending on it. There are reports that the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) at one point banned the game from the ARPANET due to its popularity.

Thompson and other programmers later developed several other versions of Maze, including a specialized hardware-based game by Thompson and other students as well as a version titled Mazewar by Jim Guyton, Mike Wahrman, and colleagues at Xerox for the Xerox Alto computer. The Xerox version went on to inspire many different takes on the first-person maze game concept in the 1980s and 1990s, released under many different names. Maze is believed to be the first 3D first-person game ever made. It is likely also the earliest example of what was later termed the first-person shooter genre and is considered along with the 1974 space flight simulation game Spasim to be one of the "joint ancestors" of the genre. It has additionally been credited with a variety of other firsts, such as the first level editor, first observer mode and radar, and first avatars, but due to its reliance on specific, expensive computer hardware its direct influence on video games and the first-person shooter genre was limited.

Voorbeelden uit tekstcorpus voor bureaucratic maze
1. Most here describe the Afghan court system as a bureaucratic maze that is incredibly corrupt.
2. "We can‘t wait to deal with a bureaucratic maze," Knowlton said.
3. Yoni Kuperman, CEO of Tmura financial arrangements group, offers the following FAQ guide to the bureaucratic maze: Advertisement Employers are directly responsible for paying severance.
4. Most of the billions of dollars in federal relief has yet to reach homeowners, the funds stuck in a bureaucratic maze at the state level.
5. And of course, company officials had to work through the usual bureaucratic maze that must be navigated to set up a new business in town.