The Gamers are Coming…and they’re changing the world!!!
In the opening lines of the original Star Trek series captain James T. Kirk introduces the episode with the phrase “Space: the final frontier”?. Today there is a new frontier being crossed by society. A frontier no less foreign, intimidating, and in some people’s minds, no less fictional than Star Trek’s galaxies – this new frontier is the world of the Gaming Generation.
Generation X and the Millennials are the first generations to have grown up in the computer game era. In the past games were events; everyone would gather around and block off an evening or significant amount of time to play Monopoly, Risk, Backgammon, or cards. The game was played at a time set aside specifically for it. Today’s youth come home and turn on the TV to play on their Playstation, not watch TV. When they stand in queues they have games on their cellphone or iPod to keep them busy. At the end of the year when Sony releases the PlayStation 3 it will be the most powerful computer in the household. In short, games and gaming pervade almost every sphere of their lives, not just the odd Friday evening put aside for a social gathering.
This shift has built gaming into the DNA of the Gaming generation. Their values, worldview, and lifestyles are affected as they look at the world very differently to those non-gamers they share the world with. These changes need to be understood & engaged with as we become the colleagues, friends, bosses, and parents of this group. World of Warcraft [one of the most popular games on the internet] wizard Helen Cheng says that many players spend more time playing the game than working at their regular jobs.

If music wasn’t such a significant part of people’s lives, the music industry would have been brought to it’s knees by now. My own opinion is that it’s run, generally speaking, by a group of money grabbing, consumer abusing, artist exploiting, fat cats, with very little intention of changing their industry willingly In that department they’re a little like despotic regimes who need revolutions to over throw them. In case the music industry hasn’t noticed… there’s a revolution on the boil.
Google just launched the beta version of
In a
Ed Jordan is fairly well known in South African music circles. Together with some business mates, he has produced a few albums of kids music with a distinctly African flavour – you can
I bought my daughter the DVD of ‘
The patent dispute between Creative and Apple over the music navigation system on portable players is old news.
I just had a birthday. My amazing wife bought me an iPod Video. It replaces my iPod mini that’s given me hours of amazingness. I used my iPod mini for mostly travelling by plane to escape the mind-numbing experience of airline travel. As I discovered PodCasts I spent a lot less time listening to music, and a lot more time getting some great input from the various PodCasts I subscribe to. The iPod video will enhance my experience even more. (that’s the theory)
I’m always on the look out for new ways people are viewing and using the world (paradigm shifts). In a world of discontinuous change they’re happening all around us. It’s in these spaces that we see new innovations as people’s minds are opened up to possibilities never before imagined, or if imagined, often ahead of their time.
Microsoft South Africa are currently running a series of radio and print ads. The theme is how “risky” it is to have unlicensed software. The pic attached here is of a shop left unattended and the door open. The radio slots include a person phoning a friend at the top of his voice and getting his bank card access PIN number shouted for everyone to hear. There are other similar ones, all related to being at risk.
How does a company who so often has been on the cutting edge of innovation and known for delighting their customers with some of the most amazing gizmos and gadgets get it so wrong? Personally I think they’ve moved a bunch of accountants and lawyers into their R&D labs and some of the crazies and hackers out.
The digital revolution is coming to Hollywood. Digital movies are now making it possible to bypass the massive hierarchies that exist in Tinseltown, allowing innovative directors to go direct to making movies, without getting bogged down in the politics and cost-spiralling of the movie studios, producers and big wigs.
Can the current licensing structures around software, etc actually make it impossible to improve your lot in life without risking HUGE fines? The following is an extract from a post on The GripeLine by Ed Foster.

EULA = End User License Agreement. That annoying scroll-down window of text you always ignore when installing new software. I must’ve installed software hundreds of times, and never once read the agreement. My indifferent attitude has never come back to bite me, however, “
Podcasting, according to
I am a huge fan of the
So here’s a solution for someone out there (I’m sure it exists already – everything does, it’s just unequally distributed). A device that plays the original on one track and the ‘add-on’ on another track. The add-on track doesn’t carry much, but it adds bits and pieces that take what the originator has done to a whole new level.
Sony is to are for its top of 500 movies as paid for downloads, with versions available for mobile phones and portable games consoles. The company is hoping to combat the rise in the legal movie downloads by following the strategy that Apple fans so successful with it iTunes music service. Like iTunes titles, the movies will play only on compatible devices.
Rather than owning things, many people are moving towards experiences, rentals, trading, and the virtual. The old world of purchase, prestige and property rights is being replaced by a world where ownership is not necessary or assumed, and may even be violated.
As young people spend less time watching television and more time online and playing games, advertisers have devised a new way to reach them. So says a report in the Economist (11 June 2005 –
Firstly, if they think it will stop downloading of music, they’re crazy. The ruling only applies to the USA, and how do they think they’re going to stop it happening? Who’s going to police it?
The big news at Cannes 2005 right now is the forced withdrawal of two spectacular Sony Playstation 2 adverts: “Duel” and “War”. Barrie blogged about them earlier this week (
Have you seen the new Playstation adverts? You can see them on AdCritic or AdForum. Or you can watch them right off of the TBWA web site 
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