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Rich Karlgaard has been a publisher for Forbes Magazine sine July 98 and he writes on new-economy.
Hooked on Phonics for PS3 launch.
Rich Karlgaard has been a publisher for Forbes Magazine sine July 98 and he writes on new-economy.
I don't normally write about computer games. And I don't intend to start now. My point in bringing up the Xbox 360 and the PlayStation 3 is that they hint at what serious computing--corporate, government and academic computing--could look like a decade from now.
Here's why.
• Tomorrow's workforce will consist of the kids who are now playing computer games.
• Games are a universal language in and of themselves. Multinational workforces can learn games more easily than English.
• Employers may not be able to expect much in the way of reading skills from tomorrow's generation.
• Companies can boost productivity by simulating tasks on computers before deploying capital and people.
Memo to Sam Palmisano: You make chips that run the world's coolest games. Now put some game into IBM's Global Services. Buy Electronic Arts.
Hooked on Phonics for PS3 launch.