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Comment educational gaming (Score 1) 25

though the combination of words can cause the average gamer to shudder, if you think about it, a plethora of educational games exist in the world today, and many of us would not be who we are without them. Sure, there are the obvious examples of increased hand eye coordination and creative problem solving, and of course, the old time Lemonade stand, Number Munchers, Mario Teaches Typing, Oregon Trail, etc. But many games have taught me valuable life lessons rangig from personal behavior to morals and ethics to conversative abilities. I'd even go as far to say that I have learned more about being a better human being through video games than actualy dealing with people. I mean, have you seen the crap people do to each other these days? It's no surprise that video games are on the verge of being re-utilized for educational purposes.

Now, here comes the interesting part (at least for me) I am a teacher at a private school. This was not my intended field, I went to school for creative writing as it pertains to video games (being sick of horrible and redundant plots, poor dialogue, and insufficient character growth and reactions) and I would love to have the opportunity to either help with this campaign or utilize it during the testing phase. If anyone out there knows how to contact those responsible for this so I can speak with them, please let me know. I believe my e-mail address will post with this, but if it does not, reach me at my work e-mail 'j.ginsberg@wfha.org'

The sooner we can bring video games into the mainstream through education, the sooner we can prove to all the older generations (no offense meant) that video games are not the problem with society but that society is the problem with society (and society is the problem with video games)

Thanks for listening

10 Terrible Portrayals of Technology in Film 745

Luke Hachmeister writes to mention a light piece at GideonTech on some of the truly terrible portrayals of technology in film. From Hackers to AntiTrust, Hollywoood just can't stick to reality. From the article: "Harrison Ford plays a security expert at a bank. He falls prey to a scheme to steal money for a gang that has taken hostage of his family. The film tried very hard to keep it a rollercoaster ride of thrills. From the beginning, you have Harrison Ford typing furiously to stop a hacker by writing new firewall rules. At least this time, these rules didn't float around in a rainbow of colors ala Hackers. What really puts Firewall at the top of the list, is the dumbest and non-believable use of an iPod to date. This is 2006, not 1995, you can't just make stuff up like this anymore. In the middle of the film, Harrison Ford happens to not only be a security expert, but an Apple hardware developer too."

LOTR Jumps the Shark 247

eggoeater writes "The latest incarnation of The Lord of the Rings is here in the form of musical theater and, as reported by Yahoo News, the reviews are not good. The Toronto production puts less emphasis on plot, character, and music, and concentrates more on hi-tech theatrics. The production uses a 40-ton, computer controlled stage with 17 elevators and the cast of 55 goes through 500 costumes in the 3 hour performance. Despite this, the same critics say it will be a big money-maker."

Sony Ceases Production of PSOne 159

Gamespot has the news that Sony is no longer manufacturing the PSOne. From the article: "Despite the news, Sony representatives noted today that the end of production does not necessarily mean the end of availability. PS hardware and software are still selling in countries around the world. Even if original PlayStation systems and games are becoming slim pickings in the US, gamers likely won't be going without for long. As part of its PlayStation Business Briefing 2006, Sony last week announced that it is working on an emulator that would allow gamers to play PS titles on the PSP."

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