7. The Online World

Aug-26-2011 | Comments (0)

Bird’s Eye: One of the great surprises in Bali was how the ubiquity of free wifi let me remain in touch with the world. Just how universal it has become to be online is shown by a fascinating set of statistics. Then we look at the online business of gaming, and the new wave of handheld games. We end with Cory Doctorow, in a TED Talk on how to protect your kids on the Internet. It’s quite wonderful.

* What happens on the Internet every 60 seconds (via Reddit)

Search engine Google serves more that 694,445 queries

  • 6,600+ pictures are uploaded to Flickr
  • 600 videos are uploaded to YouTube, amounting to 25+ hours of content
  • 695,000 status updates, 79,364 wall posts and 510,040 comments are published on Facebook
  • 70 new domains are registered
  • 168,000,000+ emails are sent

Lady Gaga, pop supremo, wearer of meat dresses, the star who has sold more than 15m albums worldwide, announced on Wednesday that she is partnering with games company Zynga to release exclusive songs through their Facebook game, FarmVille. The singer’s fans will be able to visit GagaVille, a specially designed farm inside the virtual farming simulation game, which will contains unicorns and crystals.

Lady Gaga’s choice of FarmVille makes sense: it’s an enormous market. The game has around 60 million players worldwide – that’s roughly the same size as the population of the UK. And FarmVille’s demographic appeal is broad. The game is inoffensive to the point of being anodyne, and unchallenging to the point that some commentators say it barely deserves the title “game” at all. But the lack of challenge is part of what’s made it successful: it can be played on any internet-connected computer, doesn’t need special equipment or particular skill, or an expensive phone or data-download plan.

In FarmVille, players plant virtual crops – strawberries, bell peppers and leeks are just some of the many choices – wait a few hours, and then harvest them to receive coins that allow them to buy more farming supplies. Of course, the best farming goods can’t be bought with in-game coins, but need real money, with items ranging from a few pence to a few pounds. As the New York Times pointed out in a profile of FarmVille’s founder Mark Pincus last year, “the sums are small, but add up quickly when multiplied by millions of users”.

* IPad gaming, Angry Birds, & Grand Theft Auto Tom Bissell

It is becoming ever easier to share the crepuscular outlook of my developer friends — if, that is, the kinds of games you most often play are console games. For gamers whose chosen platform is, say, the iPad, the future of the medium seems quite a bit sunnier. I have never been much for handheld games, cell-phone games, or smaller games in general, but after spending several weeks playing games on my iPad, I can say that the best of them provide as much, if not more, consistent engagement than their console brethren. In fact, a really fine iPad game offers an experience in which many of the impurities of console gaming are boiled away.

Many of these pure games — less grandly known as “gamey games” — have little of the narrative ambition (or, to put it less kindly, bloat) typical to console games and, as a consequence, don’t bother trying to push the same emo-cognitive buttons. They get in your head, to be sure, but through different passageways. Another way of saying this is that console games do everything in their power to form a relationship with you, which can be great and rewarding and, just as often, aggravating and tedious. iPad games, on the other hand, are like someone you meet in a bar and find yourself screwing in the bathroom 10 minutes later. This is not a criticism.

* Cory Doctorow‏ re facebook and privacy TED Talks Youtube 11 minutes



2. Workers of the Third World, Unite

Jul-16-2010 | Comments (0)

Bird’s-Eye: Logically enough, workers in Asia want a larger slice of the billions of (your currency goes here) that western corporations are making on their cheap labour. So while Vietnam’s mix of communism and capitalism is thus far immune, there are strikes in China, in Thailand, in Bangladesh. We look why this is good news, and note how Cory Doctorow’s latest book For the Win (“part thriller, part economics lesson, and a rallying cry to those in the world who still believe that workers can be a powerful force for social change”) saw it coming. How does he keep doing that? (Free book download here)

* Children Beaten By Bangladeshi Police As They Join Garment Workers’ Strikes The Guardian

Police in Bangladesh using bamboo staves, teargas and water cannon fought with textile workers demanding back pay and an immediate rise in monthly wages on the streets of Dhaka today. Witnesses said at least 30 people, mainly workers producing garments for global brands, were injured. Pictures showed children apparently being beaten. Ten policemen were also hurt.

* Thai Workers Out Of Poverty, Into Dissent Washington Post

San Silawat has three dogs, two cows and a parrot. He grows rice and spring onions on a small plot of land. But he’s hardly a pauper: He’s added a second floor to his house and built a blue-tiled patio. His son plays computer games in the front room. His daughter recently bought a Nissan pickup truck. His granddaughter studies nursing in Bangkok. For all his relatively good fortune, however, San is certain about one thing: “Life is definitely getting worse,” said the 62-year-old farmer, grumbling about the price of gasoline, school fees and a political and economic system he sees as rigged in favor of the rich.

* Workers In China Grasp The Power Of The Strike The Observer

Zhang Liwen found out that she was about to go on strike over a breakfast of steamed buns and congee rice porridge at her factory dormitory. Fifteen minutes later, she was taking part in industrial action for the first time in her life….The next day she and the rest of the 1,000-strong workforce repeated the demonstration at the Japanese-owned factory, which makes parts for Toyota and Honda. This time, the corporate union begged them to go back to work. Again they refused.

* These Strikes Are Good For China – And For The World Seumas Milne The Guardian

In a nation where strikes are discouraged and often barely reported, the response of the authorities to the latest wave of stoppages has verged on the supportive. The chairman of the state-owned partner of Honda and Toyota, for instance, insisted the workers’ demands were “reasonable”. The party’s Global Times warned the strikes showed the necessity of “organised labour protection”, complaining “ordinary workers” had received the “smallest share of economic prosperity” from China’s opening to the world market.







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