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Posted on 05.27.09 by Alexandre Maron @ 00:59
Wired tells the story of how the corporate e-mail could become a real resource management game… It is the zeitgeist… Filed under: New Ways to Play Agree? Disagree? Want to report an error? Comment: None |
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Posted on 05.27.09 by Alexandre Maron @ 00:56
I was talking earlier about how Ebay (among others) made a business of turning auctions, highly addictive play like events, into an even sexier activity. Yesterday I saw an add at the underground here in London of a website called Swoopo. They took the Ebay concept to another level. It works like this: people put objects for auction for insanely low prices and the bids go up in 10p increases. But to make a bid you pay 50p and a piece of this money goes to the seller. The bidder buys tokens (50 bids, 100 bids) that will use in auctions. The auctions happen in short periods of time and if someone makes a bid inside the last 20 seconds of the deadline of an auction it gets a time extension. This mechanic tends to get lower prices and the seller will make extra money from the bidding. So, the more interesting an item is, more bidding it should generate. So, an auction becomes, more than ever, a strategy game where timing and pacing is very important. The creators turned the activity in a bona fide game. I don’t know if it will work. But the concept is amazing. Filed under: New Ways to Play and Rules of the Game Agree? Disagree? Want to report an error? Comment: None |
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Posted on 05.26.09 by Alexandre Maron @ 10:05
A very common mistake when you are doing any kind of research is what i call the hammer approach. There is a saying that when a person has a hammer, every problem starts to look like a nail. So I like to put some serious effort in not saying that everything is a game or that games are in everything. But ont thing I can say with no fear of being wrong: most of the success stories of the last decade had some component of the Play Factor. eBay Social Networks YouTube And there is more. Just look at how your most favorite websites work and you will see the Play Factor in them. The best sites and best media products have this component. And they have different concepts. Not evey people love to bid. Some only like to browse products. Not everyone feel well about colecting stamps in a social network environment. We look for the ones that fit with our tastes. That is why we love them. Filed under: Interfaces and New Ways to Play Agree? Disagree? Want to report an error? Comment: None |
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Posted on 05.09.09 by Alexandre Maron @ 20:12
There are things in life that are necessary, but not exactly exciting. Let’s look at the good old moment when an urban, hip and well informed couple wants to go out for dinner and have to decide where to go. Well, if you are in London, you could go to Yelp. Choose a cuisine… Then, betwen a plethora of options, choose a restaurant… And take a look at what is people saying about the place. Three straight forward steps. Simple, but have nothing special and sometimes not finding the right place could be frustrating. Now. Let’s go back one step. Lets break it down in pieces. Well, we need to find a restaurant. We may define the kind of food, where and how much we are willing to spend. Three variables? There maybe more, but let’s stay with these ones for now. Does it have to be this way? Is there any way we could do the same thing and make it, hum, sexier? Make it funny? Fun? Let’s see how Urbanspoon answered this question… Cool. I know that if you are a passionate Iphone user, you may already know this app, but the point is: this is one of the most perfect examples of the Play Factor. But we can’t forget that an Iphone app is going to a specific kind of audience. So, the website of Urbanspoon is still a very conventional one, although tey have a version of the application there.
So they have in mind that they need to be able to offer the right experience for the right customer. Filed under: Definition and New Ways to Play and Social Media and Videos Agree? Disagree? Want to report an error? Comment: None |
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Posted on 05.03.09 by Alexandre Maron @ 16:48
This is not the central point of my research, but I will always talk about how we use interfaces that reminds us of games. These are more metaphors and not always pratical or workable concepts. Have a look at how everyone, everyone that matters, at least, used mashups with maps and shiny graphics to keep track of how the Swine Flu (ridiculously renamed Novel Flu H1N1 by WHO, CDC whatever). Filed under: Interfaces and The World as a Playground Agree? Disagree? Want to report an error? Comment: None |






