Games in the Workplace?
Anonymous Coward asks: "Back in the day it was not uncommon for games to contain 'Escape Buttons' and other commands to quickly exit a game. These games appealed to the Geek at Work as he could fill in his Friday afternoon and as soon as he heard his boss' shoes approaching, he could escape from the third dungeon and return to his spreadsheet. Yet games today are not allowing such activities to occur. Most games are requiring so much dedicated action that it is impossible to play a game and still switch back and forth without long delays. Where are the games for the worker?"
Yeah yeah... this is why Apple went out of business a decade ago - they charged more for a better product, and since people never want anything but the lowest price product, nobody bought Macs in the previous dip in the economy.
What's that you say? Apple is still in business, and is the only computer manufacturer that has so much demand they're having to increase prices!? Surely that's not possible...
The one thing that bugs me more than all the libertarian geeks is the libertarian geek that doesn't understand economics. It might just happen that the time wasted waiting for an understaffed help center to get around to the customer is actually costing that customer more than the extra cost of helping to pay for an overstaffed help center. It might just happen a lot, actually... or at least enough that there will always be enough customers who are saving money by spending it intelligently.
--Matthew