태터데스크 관리자

도움말
닫기
적용하기   첫페이지 만들기

태터데스크 메시지

저장하였습니다.


'metaverse'에 해당되는 글 3건

  1. 2007/08/21 State of Play V: Regulating Virtual Worlds, and Changes in Education, Connecting East and West (1)
  2. 2007/08/21 State of Play V: Building Businesses in Virtual Worlds (1)
  3. 2007/08/20 I'm at State of Play V
2007/08/21 01:40

State of Play V: Regulating Virtual Worlds, and Changes in Education, Connecting East and West

I wasn't able to write too much after the first session. So, rather I'm going to try to put down the summaries of the last 3 sessions I had today.

Regulating Virtual Worlds
Legal experts explore how controversies related to intellectual property, real-money transfer, gaming as political speech, time-limit addiction laws and the policing of Internet cafes play out throughout the region. They will also draw our attention to culturally variable assumptions that underpin analytical approaches to these issues.
Much of the panel discussion revolved around whether it's better to have communities self-regulate or have external forces to step in. At large, there are three forces at play: 1) community of players regulating themselves, 2) game and virtual world makers deciding what needs to happen within through creating systems certain way, 3) actual regulating bodies like the government. Many factors come into play here. Obviously, it'll be the best if all the players and communities act reasonable enough to reach certain social agreements and norms to control themselves; however, not quite so in reality. That's what makes things complicated. Besides, creating laws and regulations for a world that doesn't really exist is a very difficult task itself. For example, let's say there is a crime in Second Life. What country's law should be applied to that member? Is it for Linden Lab to decide? Or should the U.S. government intervene? What if the player was Korean?

Education, Kids, and Teens in Virtual Worlds
There has been an explosion of interest in the use of virtual worlds in education. This panel will examine what works and what doesn’t work, and will present some ideas for the effective use of online spaces for student learning.  It will also ask examine how children and teens interact within virtual worlds, and what this teaches us about building kid-and-teen-friendly environments for learning and playing.
This session was very interesting because I've always known there's so much learning, in a non-traditional sense, that could be done through an environment like virtual worlds. People indeed train themselves and learn a great deal in this kind of environment. They set goals for themselves, leadership becomes visible, and they collaborate with each other to solve certain problems. Some of the examples in the session were astonishing--like teaching classes in StarWars Galaxy. Now how much of this could be applied to the real world education?

Currently the real world education system is designed for a world back in 1950's. Kids are growing up enormously influenced by the digital technology. They are a lot more participatory also. The social and economic scenes are changing faster than ever due to the Internet. Unfortunately, none of this is reflected in the current one-way-teaching and text-based education system. For us to be able to adopt the opportunities given by virtual worlds and other technologies, we need a completely new mindset.

However, not everything can be learned in virtual worlds, obviously. It's our job to figure what virtual worlds can offer in this space. It seems at the moment that virtual worlds are good providing an environment in which people can come together to collaborate to solve certain problems, rather than learning specific skill sets.

Connecting East and West
Experts explore variations in playing styles, the influence of game mechanics on cross-cultural cooperation, the challenge of intercultural communication, and outcomes of forced localization. This panel will also explore issues of society, governance and virtual worlds as a vehicle for people-to-people diplomacy.
Well, as you know, that's the goal of this blog. I want to let known to the world what's here in Korea and Asia and see if we can make any connections between East and West. I was actually one of the panelists during this session. But, I wasn't invited as an "official" panelist, but rather as a translator to Judge Unggi Yoon, who is a very well-respected member here. He'd explain what the MMORPGs are like in Korea and I'll translate that into English for the audience. But, hey, I was still up on the stage. What an honor! ;)

The session covered various topics ranging from the two different purposes of playing games in Lineage and Second Life, gold-farming, index for measuring the east/west-ness and etc. I really enjoyed the session while listening on the side most of the time. We definitely need to take a more analytical approach to crossing the gap. While there are fundamental differences between the two which will never get any closer than they are right now, there are also a growing number of commonalities among the two that something could be done for further development. The most important point of the session, I guess, was acknkowledging the value of the differences and how the differences indeed enrich our virtual world experiences.

- - -

Just like every time I attend a conference, I really enjoyed meeting new people and having conversations with them. It's simply because you get to learn so much by doing so. For me, this is a completely new experience: the first time being in Singapore and first time being immersed in the virtual worlds talk.

I'm very excited for tomorrow and hopefully I'll be able to bring even more interesting stuff to you all.

brought to you by
사용자 삽입 이미지

Trackback 0 Comment 1
2007/08/21 01:30

State of Play V: Building Businesses in Virtual Worlds

Virtual world builders now encourage third parties to develop content inside their worlds, and so we’ve seen the rise of businesses built inside virtual worlds.  This panel will explore the nature of these businesses, and look at how businesses get built within virtual worlds.  It will ask whether the trend has played out, and examine the future of businesses inside the virtual worlds.
The first session was on "Building business in virtual worlds." I liked how the conference started off with the business aspect because you typically get the information that's very "real" when talking about businesses.

Discussion was started with a question about the different branding strategies for real world and virtual worlds. Can the same branding strategy be applied to virtual worlds, too? Obviously, the answer was No". Like in Web 2.0, it's a lot more about having conversations and engagement. There's so much social going on here that virtual world branding strategies must incorporate the social nature of the medium. It's better to start your first chatper and hand the pen over to fans and users. This way you can totally up your innovation speed, too.

The question of "open vs. closed" came up here as well. Again, like in Web 2.0, not everything needs to be open all the time; however, people in this field are increasingly discovering the value of open in virtual worlds.

So I decided to act brave and went up and asked a question:
"It seems like given the strong media nature of virtual worlds, much of their business aspect has to do the marketing/advertising after all. Within the context of convincing the clients, what are some of the metrics and methologies to measure the efficiency of marketing and advertising in virtual worlds?"

I really wanted to know the answer because with my background in Web 2.0/Media, I needed to know how things are different in virtual worlds. Answers were basically that virtual worlds are a lot more about interactions themselves than information flow like on the Web. Also scales are far smaller in virtual worlds than the Web. Thus, we get smaller scale, but much higher engagement in virtual worlds. One of the most frequently used metrics are the amount of time spent by players around a certain advertising object. It could easily go up to hours and hours every day.

The session closed with a question, which I thought was very appropriate for closing, which was "what are some opportunities for enterpreneurs in virtual worlds?" Answers really varied. And when you get diverse responses like that, what that really means is "it's up to your imagination" :) Some of the answers were:
  • Creating consultancies within virtual worlds
  • Real companies/organizations can use virtual worlds as collaborative spaces
  • More opportunities in developing countries because they can move in with so much less barrier-to-entry. Product designer/developers will have huge opportunities
  • Turn the World Wide Web into the World Wide World
  • Short term: Infrastructure - code developement, design skills, creative (story lines)
  • Long term: any job you see in real world will be seen in virtual worlds
  • Collaboration applications
I'm ending this post with one memorable comment made by one of the panelists: "SecondLife is like the Mosaic browser in 1993. It's only the beginning. It comes down to communications, collaboration, communities."

brought to you by
사용자 삽입 이미지

Trackback 0 Comment 1
2007/08/20 10:01

I'm at State of Play V

I'm sitting in the Ballroom of Marina Mandarin Hotel in Singapore. The State of Play V is about to begin!

I'll be reporting from the conference time to time (not quite sure about live blogging every session, but I'll do my best!)

Please let me know if there's anyone you want me to interview. I'm here as press so I might be able to :) Here's the list of speakers. Also, having a look at what metaverse means will obviously help you a great deal, here's a link to the wikipedia article.

Ok. See you soon!

A couple of snapshots:



brought to you by
사용자 삽입 이미지

Trackback 0 Comment 0