Sunday, September 23, 2012

Are Games Good for Girls...or Anybody?


You look away from the screen; down at your watch…it’s 4:30 in the morning. You have just beaten Call of Duty: Modern Warfare…chances are you’re a guy. The gaming industry has always had a gender problem. More guys play more games for longer periods of time than girls do. But, the market has recently changed and girls seem to be playing more and more games. What has changed? I think the release of the iPhone has really changed the way society and girls view games. There is a divide (page 15-17) when it comes to hardcore games that are played on consoles and casual games on the internet or an iPhone. Guys seem to use console based games that they get really into and play for hours more than girls do. With the release of lots of mobile games I have seen more and more girls playing games and, not just un-educational games, but strategy and word building games like Words with Friends. So, is it a bad thing that girls don’t play as many console games as guys do? I say no because these types of games often absorb the player and have them waste hours playing a game that does not enrich them at all. If girls pick up strategy/educational games on mobile consoles, I see that a good shift in society.
It is shown (Page 15-17) that girls tend to play casual short-term games. When games like this come to mind I think of games like Bubble Trouble or Bubble Spinner. These are both games that I have played with many girls and that I have seen them play by themselves as well. I have played these games with girls on a computer, but what I have seen the iPhone do is create accessible and casual games that get girls into playing more games. These games are not limited to just “pink” games as some would call them, but games that they play with other guys and girls alike. The iPhone has created a gaming revolution that has taken over the country. Each time a revolutionary game comes out I see my whole school engulfed in the game, not just the guys. For a while I was playing Words With Friends, a popular scrabble-like games, with 5 girls and 3 guys from my school. I have seen the happen with other games as well. I know that Fruit Ninja was really popular among many of my friends that are girls and still is their go to game if they are bored or on a train etc. It seems that the popularity and the accessibility the iPhone has created has shifted the gaming paradigm that used to exist, but is this the best thing for society?
            I have always loved video games, but I am not the type of person that would spend hours upon hours playing a game until I got to a high level or I beat the game. I am not really into gaming and I don’t think that getting more girls into gaming is something that is really important. Sure, video games can be a fun thing to do when you sleep over at a friend’s house or you need to entertain your younger cousins, but when it comes down to it, do games actually enriches our lives? There have been many studies showing that playing video games give you better hand-eye coordination etc. but to what degree? And do the hand-eye coordination benefits out way the hours people spend just staring at a screen? I don’t think so. But, I do see the potential in having kids learn from educational games and I think they have a different impact on kids than games such as Call of Duty. I remember playing a lot of math PC games that I found really fun. I remember those games helped me learn to multiply and learn other areas of math that I had trouble with as a kid. With the creation of iPads and iPhones these learning games have become really popular with children and seem to be helping kids of all different learning abilities process information. It really depends on what type of gaming someone is doing whether it is a guy or a girl. There is the intense and engulfing type of gaming where someone will spend hours playing the night away and then there is the light form of gaming that seems to attracting more and more girls. This is the type of gaming that I think is here to stay and become more popular. Not to say that console based games are going to fall out of the spotlight, but I think that with the learning potential and growing popularity among a lot of different demographics we will see a rise in new and interesting gaming options on portable devices like the iPhone or iPad.

Sunday, September 16, 2012

Living in a Digital Culture: Trolling the Internet Got Me This Job?!?


You are looking through a bookstore (you know, the one that is left after all of the rest have gone out of business) and you come upon Gone With the Wind by Margaret Mitchell. You recognize the name (remembering it is a famous novel or movie…or both? You don’t know, but nevertheless you pick it up) and open it to see if you would like it. A look of horror creeps across your face as you slowly realize that the language is too dense and heavy for you to even want to read. Why is this? You remember a time when a book like Gone With the Wind would have been a pleasure to read, its lengthy prose and dense language wouldn’t have been a problem. But after hours of jumping around on the internet your habits have changed and now you can’t stand the sight of a book that requires so much concentration. Has the internet ruined my generation, generations past and all of the ones to come? No, the internet is an advance in society that has revolutionized the world for the better and is an advance that should not be looked down upon. Just like Socrates criticized written word because he thought it would make people’s memory worse, modern day critics of the internet say that it is changing to way people process dense language and data. But, just like written word changed the world for the better, so has the internet. And it will continue to be something that revolutionizes the world. So far the benefits of the internet including the ability to access millions of previously unattainable resources out way any negatives that have arisen on top of the fact that the internet is now a staple of our society (and is here to stay).

Above: Gone With the Wind by Margaret Mitchell
            The internet got me my first internship. Doesn’t that seem strange? How would trolling the internet for hours have gotten me a job when it seems like just the opposite should be true? Having an interest in fashion I always looked at magazines like Vogue and Harpers Bazaar, but the knowledge I could gain from these magazines were limited to what the editors and writers wanted me to read. What if I wanted to know what Rick Owens’ bedroom looked like or what kind of dogs Jack and Lazaro of Proenza Schouler have? Well, the internet gave me the access to find this information. The internet was a giant fashion encyclopedia to me and I would spend hours scrounging through thousands of websites just absorbing data. Because of this, when I met my now former boss and my mentor I actually impressed her with my peculiar knowledge of a random fact that included world famous ice sculptures creating the Fall/Winter Chanel 2010 runway. I was asked to intern on the spot, something that has set me on the track to have an amazing career in fashion. At the time I was just a 16 year old nobody that had no connections in the fashion world, but something that I did have was access, access to valuable information that I culled from random sights on the internet. This is just one amazing thing that has happened to me because of the internet, but I can think of hundreds more. What is important to note is not just that the internet can do amazing things for people, but also that the internet is now a permanent part of society.
Above: Chanel Fall/Winter 2010
            
The internet has permeated every part of modern day society, firmly planting its roots into the lives of most of the people on earth. This is just the natural course of society advancing.  The internet has created a technological revolution just like the way the typewriter and the printing press created a technological ripple in society when they were first introduced. In the end, both the typewriter and printing press revolutionized society and became a permanent step in the staircase that is the history of technology/society. This is what has happened with the internet, it also is now a step in the very same staircase (and a very large step might I add) that both the typewriter and printing press are a part of. What has happened with the internet is that it has become an unavoidable part of society; it is a natural advance that will lead to new ideas, technologies and much more. The world is constantly moving forward with new advancements happening every second and I can’t wait to see what new advancements stem from the internet.

Bibliography: Carr, Nicholas. "Is Google Making Us Stupid?" The Atlantic. N.p., n.d. Web. 16 Sept. 2012. <http://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2008/07/is-google-making-us-stupid/306868/>.