Sunday, December 19, 2010

Are Video Games Addictive?

Terranova Interview

In the interview found on Terra Nova, Aaron Walsh talks about aspects of virtual reality education. One of the aspects is the fact that there is a growing addiction surrounding virtual reality. Walsh has coined this phenomenon "immersive illness". Throughout the article, Second Life is talked about as being a future platform of immersive learning. While past problems regarding the hardware of such immersive forums have caused boundaries, these bumps in the road are quickly being ironed out. This interview can be found at http://terranova.blogs.com/terra_nova/2007/05/teaching_in_vr_.html

Second Skin Trailer

'Game Over' - A Feature on Video Game Addiction

DNN Story 2007 - Video Game Addiction

QED - My Best Friend's a Computer (Part 3 / 3) Full documentary

QED - My Best Friend's a Computer (Part 2 / 3) Full documentary

QED - My Best Friend's a Computer (Part 1 / 3) Full documentary

America's Army


I was able to download America's Army and Stream, but I was unable to run the game. I believe this is due to the fact I have a netbook and it is not equipped to play video games.

Course Evaluation


I could not get back to the course eval page because I completed my evaluations before I knew that we had it as an assignment. Therefore, this page saying I could not access the evaluation for this class popped up when I tried to open it. This shows that I have already completed the evaluation for this class.

12/19/10

Sunday, December 12, 2010

WoW My Addiction


Professor Aaron E. Walsh notes: This was written by "John" in July 2007. John was a student of mine. He was in my Discovering Computer Graphics course at Boston College (http://ImmersiveEducation.org/@/bc), and was much more advanced than the other students. When I asked why he was taking this class, when he clearly had enough experience to take one of my more advanced classes, he explained that he had no choice: he had failed out of school, and was starting over. After we talked more as the semester went he explained why. I asked him to write it down for future students. Here’s what he wrote in one sitting about why he was “starting over”:


World of Warcraft (WoW): My Addiction


I've played various MMORPG games over the years, some being fairly addicting, some not even catching my interest, but one stands out above the rest as the most addicting and life consuming thing I've ever encountered in my life. You might have guessed it already, but that game is World of Warcraft, a game that I would recommend everyone stays away from.

Like most addictions, it didn't start out that way. It was just harmless fun; I'd log on for a few hours every day and level my character, talk to some friends I had on the game... it was nothing that took me away from other things. I was in high school at the time, and was still managing to get on with my work at first, even though that was a struggle in itself sometimes, and I kept in touch with my friends and saw them regularly.

At first I was surprised at how little interest I had in playing the game for long stints, as I had heard some things about how enticing and gripping the game was, and the first few months were fine, until I started to get near the level cap. Approaching the maximum level I began to play the game more and more, as reaching the end game content opened up a whole new world. I became involved with a hardcore raiding guild, competing to be the best guild on the server, and it all went from there.

The first thing that changed was that I now had raiding times to meet every weekday evening in addition to the gold farming I had to do during the day in order to be able to afford all the potions
and items I needed to raid, and somehow, my guilds progression through the bosses in the game became the most important thing to me in my life, and I slowly started to phase out my friends. At this point I was still going to school, so between the school day and the game, I had no time for anything else.

Contrary to what people might think, I didn't lack a social life at all, even without seeing or talking to any of my friends from school. In fact, it was quite the opposite, I had a whole new group
of friends... in World of Warcraft. Now I didn't even have to leave my room to hang out with my friends, I could just pop on my headset and hang out with them in the game.

Now, to rewind a bit, I remember when I was creeping up on the level cap, and my parents were beginning to get concerned with how much I was playing the game, I kept telling them that it would be all over soon. Heck, even I thought it would! Little did I know, the game would be even more demanding of me after that.

I wanted to be the best, I wanted to have the best items, I wanted to have the most gold. I wanted to be popular with the people on my server, I wanted to be known. I wanted to top the damage meters on every single fight. I don't know why, I can't explain it, but the game was just the most important thing to me, I wanted to do nothing else. I wanted to play every single day all day and night and would do whatever I could to keep myself awake and at the computer. Whatever it took, energy drinks, amphetamines, I would keep myself awake for hours on end, not getting any exercise and rarely leaving the house.

The more and more I played, the more and more things I felt compelled to spend my time doing inside the game. It seems that they create the game in such a way that even though there technically is a way to have the ultimate everything and clear all the bosses etc.. etc...... By the time you get close they add more content to the game to keep you going, its a never ending story. I would pick up my prescription for amphetamines just so I could stay up all night farming items to sell for gold, I wanted to have the best enchantments and to get all the rare random world drops... and so much more. I completely stopped going to school, completely stopped seeing my friends.... and the most worrying fact was that I didn't really care. It just stole my heart and mind from everything else, gave me a false sense that everything was okay and that I wasn't ruining the rest of my life. I don't know what would have happened if I hadn't stopped, I had stopped going to school and cut off social contact with everyone but the people I knew in the game, it was like a world within itself. I didn't even want to stop until I had a taste of life without it, a taste that was forced, however. If I hadn't been forced to live somewhere without a computer I don't know what would have happened.

Sunday, November 14, 2010

Sunday, November 7, 2010

Role Call 2, Class #8


11/7/10
http://immersiveeducation.org/

Role Call 1, Class #8


11/7/10
http://immersiveeducation.org/

iED Research Papers GoogleDoc



11/7/10

TOTS TV Games

There is only one screenshot from the first game because it would not let me exit out of the opening info screen.











Sunday, October 31, 2010

Midterm Submitted


I submitted all of my midterms at 4:49pm on Sunday, 10/31/10.


10/31/10

NASA Spacewalk Simulator



These screenshots are from my attempt at downloading the NASA Spacewalk Simulator. For some reason, the simulator would not download and this screen appeared the three times I tried to download the file.

10/31/10

New Building Skills - RocketWorld


Throughout the week, I tried to get onto RocketWorld three separate days, but was not granted access any of the times. My last attempt to access RocketWorld was at 4:10 on Sunday, 10/31/10. As a result of my inability to access RocketWorld, I was unable to complete assignment 2 for Class #3.

10/31/10

Optical Illusions Video

Video Games and Learning

Simulation Wikipedia


This is a screenshot of my reading the wikipedia page on simulation. I found the automobile and marine simulators sections to be very interesting.


10/31/10

Virtual Worlds, Simulators, Video Games Audio File


When I clicked the link to listen to Prof. Walsh's audio file, the file would not load and this is the screen which popped up each time I tricked to open it. Therefore, I was unable to listen to the file.

10/31/10