The Matrix For Businesses 88
An anonymous reader writes "The idea of using virtual reality and gaming technologies to create training exercises and business simulations has been around for years. But recent advances in computer graphics, interfaces, and massively multiplayer online (MMO) games have made it commercially viable to pursue simulations in the business world. Novel, a venture-backed startup company, is about to launch a new MMO role-playing game, called Empire & State, with an unusual goal: to use the technology and the lessons it learns from the game to create simulations for big companies that want to improve their human resources and hiring efficiencies. Imagine assessing employees' leadership and teamwork skills by jacking them into a virtual, multiplayer business scenario. That's the goal, but Novel will face challenges of all sorts — business, social, and technical — in its efforts to sell MMO technologies to the corporate world."
Obligatory (Score:4, Funny)
Today's Dilbert [dilbert.com], quite on-topic!
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Seriously, I fantasize about this. For most companies this would be an immediate jump to the black.
My biggest beef with HR? Refusing to consider anyone that doesn't posses a degree that basically proves they acquired a certain level of book knowledge while marinating their brain in the toxic waste of micro-organisms ( yeast ) . They have No real operative knowledge on what the position requires hiring b
Re:Obligatory (Score:4, Insightful)
Who would you then hire to ensure that employees are well-informed about the law and policies that cover them, who ensure that employee grievances are handled properly, and who manage the paperwork and such for benefits and so forth? Who would be responsible for making sure employees were fully informed (in a uniform and consistent way) at interviews about company benefits, and so on?
HR does a lot more than managing hiring, doesn't it? Sure, we want to think of them as useless twits who either screen out the good applicants we want or screen US out when we want to apply via bogus job requirements, but not all of them are like that. Moreover, there are many important parts of any business/employee relationship which have to be fulfilled by SOMEONE.
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Management actually Managing? Seriously, We had HR here and now it's gone. That chunk of money went to hiring an employee contributing to the bottom line, and we haven't looked back.
If we have questions about Legality the Lawyers take care of that.
You saying an HR person is an educated Lawyer? Check again.
- Dan.
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You know, I don't give a shit about wifi data collected by google. In fact, google one does one evil thing afaik :
Google sells fucking first place search results!
I don't even really mind google selling BP the first place search results for oil spill, but I'd wish google would charge say $5 million per day, that's a fair price given the social damage done.
Google has sold us all out by selling that search result for less than even $1 million per day. fuckers!
WHO THE - (Score:2, Interesting)
THAT'S MINUS 50 DKP!!!!
Trust me, if Leadership in MMO's is going to translate into management positions, just kill me now.
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I can't wait to see the guild names or server names. I wonder if they would roll it out with specific servers in mind: Accounting for one, HR for another, Management for another, IT etc.
Guild names? 733+haxx0rz4hir3, NumberCruncherz, -WRHR-... yeah, this could be interesting. /yawn
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Kobayashi Maru (Score:3, Insightful)
That sounds great until somebody learns to game the game. Then what practical use is it to the real world?
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That sounds great until somebody learns to game the game.
Elaborate please.
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See his title. If you don't know the reference, please leave your nerd card at the exit.
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Sorry, I got the Geek Membership, not the nerd membership, so I didn't get it at first. But either way, there aren't a whole lot of "hacks" you can pull off in server controlled MMO's.
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Kobayashi Maru
Google it.
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That sounds great until somebody learns to game the game. Then what practical use is it to the real world?
Practical? Maybe not...
But folks these days game the game all the time. It's just called "office politics".
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Its called office politics because it can get as batshit as the real thing.
Re:Kobayashi Maru (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Kobayashi Maru (Score:4, Funny)
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Then what practical use is it to the real world?
Then it is a lot of practical use, and those employees get appointed to the position of CEO. Or haven't you been watching the politics/developements (read games) played by large modern businesses lately?
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That's not even necessary. You may rest assured that that already happens all the time.
You are there in an environment where people know they are monitored constantly and that their ability is assessed. We jokingly once called it the company's Heisenberg problem: The system works differently when examined. And people actually do behave differently when they are under supervision.
The whole fallacy of all "leadership" models is still that people work for the company. They don't. They couldn't care less about
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ThirdLife? (Score:2, Insightful)
see subject. I think this has already been here before, with no real success.
Re: Or Eve (Score:2)
“Our innovation is that players have never been given the ability to explore real business practices and politics before,” Olson says. “We’ve never had the ability to do anything but kill stuff before [in MMOs].”
Really? Because that sounds EXACTLY like every other MMO that tries to revolve around business and practices.
Empire & State even has a military element!
*sigh* People who think they are the first ones to do something need to do their research.
Imagine assessing employees (Score:1, Insightful)
Imagine assessing employees' leadership and teamwork skills by jacking them into a virtual, multiplayer business scenario.
What would this offer above hiring them and seeing how they work out? Seems like a needless layer of rube goldberg complexity that doesn't make sense in the end. I guess this IS a matrix for business.
lol, let the firings commence! (Score:4, Funny)
I can see it now....someone says something dumb, Frank from Accounting comes over to their side of the conference table, jumps up on it and proceeds to tea bag them.
Yeah, MMO-like corporate worlds could be fantastic.
Didn't they do this with Second Life for a while? (Score:2)
I remember hearing about business doing something like this with Second Life. It's an interesting concept, one that makes a lot of sense when you think about it.
Heh, I can see the job posting now: "Need experienced creator of Second Life content do design our board meeting house. Red Light District experience a plus."
Educators are using it too (Score:1)
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actually as a business you can spin up a SecondLife type Server with a minimum of effort
you will need
1 a web server with MYSQL support
2 a copy of OpenSim
3 a few graphics types to create content
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You know, I was just saying yesterday that I'm so glad we don't get inundated anymore with news articles that present Second Life as if it's some great business tool, and that it's somehow "Important". That meme passed, and now it's all about how Twitter is somehow "Important".
This seems like regression; been there, done that.
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I can't find the article (believe it was here on slashdot) but the reason for that is simply that Linden Lab stopped paying everyone to say it was important so they stopped saying it.
Game Description (Score:3, Funny)
". . . but you'll need real world skills to be successful."
*sigh*
But I play video games because I DON'T have real world skills.
Not Novell (Score:4, Informative)
It took me awhile of poking around the site to finally notice that this is "Novel", not "Novell". Reading carefully is important :)
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The problem is that Somy monitor of yours.
Companies will WANT their employees to use this ? (Score:4, Insightful)
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they can also become criminal overlords, military strategists, bounty hunters, or business tycoons.
I fail to see how the last position on that list differs from the first....
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The criminal overlord can execute somebody directly. The business tycoon has a 50 person minimum.
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Any word on what technology this is built on? IMHO there's no reason not to use a platform like OpenCobalt in favour of reinventing the wheel. Especially in a business environment, where bleeding-edge graphics power isn't the point...
Not really my thing (Score:1)
This summary sucks (Score:5, Funny)
Sounds like an interesting game... (Score:2)
Free-to-play model kills games (Score:1)
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Mod UP Parent!
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Maybe it's cultural, but several games in S Korea would beg to differ, that is, if games were people (or dogs) capable of begging.
Even in the US, micropayment games are having some success... it's only a matter of time before we see more games with a macro number of micropayments being required for competing at the highest level.
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All right, but this game should model a real world experience. And in reality, that's pretty much how it is: Your rank in a game depends on how much money you (are able to) spend.
Games like this not only stand a chance, they're pretty much the model our world works on currently.
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Sooo.... (Score:2)
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Thoughts (Score:2)
Imagine assessing employees' leadership and teamwork skills by jacking them into a virtual, multiplayer business scenario.
I could see this being used for new hires, where the typical interview process doesn't bring out their true capabilities. For already hired employees, I could see it being used as an indicator for future performance. Standard assessment methods could still be used effectively for present performance. So the virtual test might be useful as a way of preparing employees for dealing with future adverse business conditions, hostile work situations, different and/or increased responsibilities, or just normal t
Is Novell reinventing the square wheel? (Score:2, Interesting)
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all of whom were working on a similar concept
No they weren't, enterprise was just one of their stupid directions.
Yes they were. LL says so: http://blogs.secondlife.com/community/features/blog/2010/06/09/a-restructuring-for-linden-lab?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed:+SecondLife+(Official+Second+Life+Blogs+-+FEATURED) [secondlife.com]
More sources: http://blogs.wsj.com/digits/2010/06/10/second-life-creator-linden-lab-downsizes-morphs/ [wsj.com] http://news.cnet.com/8301-13577_3-20007260-36.html [cnet.com] http://www.pcmag.com/article2/0,2817,2364893,00.asp [pcmag.com]
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No wonder why nothing ever gets done at Linden Lab, people who work there don't even know what the others are doing.
Except for the Linden Labs Ministry of Truth. They know where your house lives.
Get 1337 hax now! (Score:2, Funny)
I've been involved in developing this. (Score:1)
It's had some serious setbacks so far. Computers - with their inherent tendency to accurate process information - seem to have difficulty processing the normal levels of cronyism, petty gossip, office politics, nepotism. and "yes-man" traits required to to advance within normal corporate power structures. It's also been a major challenge to properly implement the Peter Principle. We're using a sort of inverted genetic algorithm in which the worst possible candidate is chosen to fill a vacant position. It's
Your mind makes it real (Score:5, Funny)
Neo: If you're fired in the Matrix, are you unemployed here?
Morpheus: The body cannot receive a paycheck without the mind. Well, except government jobs, but you get my point.
Real life Bosses respawn before you get your loot (Score:1)
FPS (Score:1, Funny)
"... to create simulations for big companies that want to improve their human resources and hiring efficiencies."
So it's some kind of First Person Shooter?
Wall Street may love it... (Score:2)
Consciences impede the rate of wealth harvesting in some sectors of the American economy; games requiring cooperation which also reward betrayal could provide quite useful information for, say, someone contemplating the creation of a hedge fund or the next variation of the synthetic mortgage-backed financial instruments scam.
From TFA.. (Score:1)
I would hardly call this "about to launch".
The really question is... (Score:2, Funny)
Will I be able to grief my boss?
Oblig. quote (Score:4, Funny)
A strange game. The only winning move is not to play. How about a nice game of chess?
Sounds cool, Mac/Linux versions??? (Score:1)
I will not be forced to install Windows just to play a game.
"improve their HR and hiring efficiencies" (Score:2)
Redundant (Score:1)
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It doesn't have people like me going around blowing your shit up? :)
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From Novel (Score:2, Interesting)
World of Workcraft (Score:3, Funny)
This seems pretty much exactly like an old parody video that was out a while back...
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=msmRwlg23Qc [youtube.com]
KHAAAAN! (Score:3, Funny)
Imagine assessing employees' leadership and teamwork skills by jacking them into a virtual, multiplayer business scenario.
Sounds like the Kobayashi Maru scenario [memory-alpha.org] to me, just without any of the fun.
Not really all that novel (Score:2)
This seems to be following a trend where people think that adding "a game" to something mundane (usually related to soul-destroying work) can make things better. The recent example was Jesse Schell's talk at the 2010 DICE conference. There's also been a lot of people who have used the appeal of MMOs being able to gather a lot of people into one area to use these worlds as beds for research. There have been a lot of academic papers trying to glean economic insight based on the activity of players in diffe
links of london bracelet (Score:1)