Slashdot Mirror


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?"

14 of 420 comments (clear)

  1. At my work by Kasmiur · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Its a call center.

    They allow the night crew to occupy themselves with games. Often they go a hour or so without any calls so it gets dull.

    We have 15 people employed to work from 10pm to 6am and they take maybe 8 calls that last for 10 minutes each at most.

    What do they do??

    Well they each have several high level characters in diablo II. The work place took the stance that if it doesn't interfer and you can quickly jump back to your desktop to actually work they don't mind. Many games they have tried to see which ones work and some simply wont let you alt-tab out of it. Those games are not played and others are. Also the option to use the computer besides you is used if that computer is empty.

    I wish more work places would take this example.

    --
    -THIS SPACE FOR RENT!
  2. Ah - the secret is to.. by 56ker · · Score: 5, Interesting

    have a Windows key on your keyboard - then you can just Windows+D to get back to the desktop quickly.

  3. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 5, Informative

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  4. The way we got around it... by sjehay · · Score: 5, Interesting

    At my school there is an absolute no-games-on-computers, ever policy in force; at the end of term though we all felt desperately in need of some BZFlag action. Being the Computer Society, we decided the way ahead was to set up a USB QuickCam connected to a Linux machine with motion detecting software (apt-get install...) aiming right at the bottom of the door; we then wrote a quick app to be executed when motion was detected which would send a specific broadcast packet on the network and a daemon to run on the client (also Linux) workstations which, on receiving the packet, would execute 'chvt 1' immediately. Having set all of this up (in about half an hour - frenzied coding!) and opened emacs/top/something-important-looking on virtual console 1, we all got down to playing BZFlag - and lo and behold, as soon as anybody walked in the door every single screen simultaneously switched to the text console and we all looked deeply studious... Worked like a charm :-)

    1. Re:The way we got around it... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

      As a former university admin who had to spend hours at a time hunting down hidden copies of pirated Warcraft II on our Windows machines, I learned to properly hate you guys.

      It drove me nuts to get a call that half the machines in the NT lab weren't working only to find they had run out of disk-space from the 50 different installs in C:\TEMP of Warcraft. I ended up have to write something that used Perl to MD5 checksum things to find files and flag them.

      And its not like we had a no games policy, since I had no issues with the massive Xpilot games that would take place, I just had an issue with pirated games and the lengths people would go to in screwing up a machine to get them to run.

      And also, because sometimes I'd get complaints from students trying to finish projects at the end of a quarter, only to find the entire lab occupied with people Warcrafting away. You may need a break from studying (although, I'd say probably getting the heck out of the University would have been a better break than sitting in same computer lab you spend 90% of the rest of your time in) but you don't need it at the expense of someone elses time. And despite all the calls of "oh, we'll get off the machine if someone really needs it" that never seemed to happen without someone having to call in a lab monitor who had to call me or my boss in.

  5. How my bosses used to caught us by philipx · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Well, first of all we had (have) quite a lax policy on games. Do your job and do whatever you like. However, most of the time games we're allowed after hours only.
    Here are three funny stories about getting caught playing.

    At this company I used to work for, the boss had a harsh policy on games and it started by refusing to buy accelerated cards. So much for Q3A... Well, however, we eventually elude him and tricked him into buying some. Six hours a day games were then not so uncommon, especially since we had a multiple floor building, the management on the last floor :). But the boss had an ace up the sleeve. He used to scan the network for Q3 servers with that tool from GameSpy that is otherwise used to "lawfully" find servers :). He said nothing, but at the end of that month penalties poured in :))

    Another funny story. We we're CTF-ing, all in the same room, a 4-4 game. I don't think a normal person could have resisted the shouts and yells that we're going on. On that particular day we thought our boss was out for the day, so we had an early start at around 4 pm. The truth was that he was out, but only to get out CEO from the airport. And most of us quickly exited the game when they entered our office when returning, except for this guy who keps on shouting : "Get the flag, get the f*ckin' flag!" with our boss and our CEO in the room. And when finally he saw we exited, he shouted, still not noticing the new commers, with his headphones still on his head: "Hey, whadda f*ck you exited now that I finally got the flag"... He turned blue two seconds later when he saw why we had exited.

    At my latest company UT was the game of the day. And since our CTO played with us most of the time, we quite often broke the "games after hours" rule and played even in the middle of the day. On one of this occasions, out CTO joined the game with the nick of another casual player (thus we didn't noticed him), took the Sniper rifle and shot of on the guys in the head. Then the message flashed on the screen : "You're busted!"...


    Well, however, I loved Q3 because you could do "bind ENTER quit" and it exited the game sooooo quickly. It saved me on more that a couple of boss-raides :)

    --
    __________
    Don't belong. Never join. Think for yourself. Peace!
  6. Re:Suggestion by (void*) · · Score: 5, Funny
    I can see it now ...


    Boss: Hey, Jeff, Let me use your computer for an email - I left my laptop back in HQ.


    Jeff the sys-admin: Ehhh ... (Quickly hits minimized) OK - here you go.


    Boss (sitting down): Sorry to stop your working.


    Jeff (smiling ironically): No problem.


    Boss: What is this - Quarterly Expense Reports. Why would a Sys-Admin like you have anything to do with Quarterly Expense Reports?


    Jeff: Errrr ...


    Boss: Come to think of it - I thought Accounting was still preparing them in confidentiality.


    Jeff: Errr ..

    .
    Boss: What's the meaning of this? You must that corporate spy from our rivals, MeAc Corp!


    Jeff: Nononono ...


    Boss: You're fired!

  7. Depends on the job and the boss by pvera · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Quick look back:

    Job #1: Satellite Communications Controller for the US Army Space Command. Lots of night shifts with nothing to do. Certain shift supervisors tolerated games as a way to keep people awake as long as the mission was not affected.

    Job #2: Civilian Satellite Communications Controller (the former American Mobile Satellite, now bankrupt as Motient).
    Again lots of shift work and hours upon hours of nothing to do. Lots of 3D shooters and Diablo. IT folks tolerated us as long as we did not screw up the PCs. Boss played stupid, he was only interested in people not getting in trouble.

    Job #3: Web Applications Developer, the employer shall remain nameless. Boss-approved 3D-shooter games at lunch almost every day as long as it did not impact a project deliverable. Full cooperation from the IT folks. We would rotate between Quake III, Half-Life and Kingpin. Some high execs were popular for their Age of Empires games at lunch. The day the Sega Dreamcast was released we had ours FEDEXed to the office and paid for by the company (only console, controllers and memory cards, they told us we could buy our own $#^& games).
    Workplace started eroding and then one day some guys got yelled at for playing Dreamcast at lunch. Eventually everybody left the company.

    Current job: Another web shop that shall remain nameless. No gaming whatsoever, the corporate mentality is BILL BILL BILL (if you have read Grisham's The Firm you know what I am talking about). People prefer to bail out of the office for Starbucks or good food instead of eating in front of the PC just to play Quake III or whatever.

    I personally tolerate one of my employees. He is a total slacker but he is a total genius on what he does, so if he wants to play a bit of Shockwave Pool at lunch then I could care less as long as he delivers on time.

    There is a project manager that likes to play Shockwave games whenever a customer puts her on hold, which is fine since the clock is ticking and the customer is paying to keep her on hold.

    I personally believe that with such high stress levels in my workplace an everywhere else, it is necessary to give employees some breathing room. Let them play a little bit. Let them take a walk around town and maybe grab a cappuccino on the way back upstairs. And don't count their lunch minutes. If the guys want to hit a restaurant once a week and spend over an hour there instead of the institutional 30 minutes (which is a retarded concept) then by God let them relax and eat something a bit tasty than a freaking burger.

    Also, if the employees are done working and they want to stay after hours for a Quake III shootout across the network, then I am not only going to look the other way but I am going to make sure the IT folks leave them alone too.

    Of course, notice that I keep saying it is OK as long as the deadlines are met. If we don't meet the deadlines we lose business and we all lose our jobs. Also, if you know a certain Project Manager is a total asshole, don't let him catch you!

    --
    Pedro
    ----
    The Insomniac Coder
  8. Reintroduce the boss key by vjzuylen · · Score: 5, Interesting

    As games are starting to require more memory all the time, you can't simply save & exit or minimize one without a significant amount of waiting and/or rattling from your hard disk. By the time the game has disappeared from view, your boss may already be onto you. And then there's the Windows taskbar, prominently displaying the game's minimized icon.

    Back in the days of DOS, most Sierra adventure games came equipped with a solution in the form of a 'boss key' - F5, if I remember correctly. Quickly pressing the key when you heard your boss approaching wouldn't exit or minimize the game - this is 640k DOS, after all - but it would bring up a mockup screenshot of a spreadsheet.

    Something similar could be used in modern games. It wouldn't actually exit the game, but it would very quickly display a fake workscreen without the telltale taskbar icon. It could even have a limited amount of interactivity or animation. If your boss asked you to punch up a different document, for instance, it could display a fake BSOD the moment you touched the Start button.

    Then, you could make a big scene out of it, claiming that this always happens because your computer has far too little memory and the video card has no 3D capabilities...

    --

    Hee-hee. Dying tickles!
  9. Two things by gmhowell · · Score: 5, Interesting

    First, it's called Solitaire.

    Second, don't you have a fucking job to do, you dirty hippy? I ain't paying you to frag the doofus in the next cubicle over.

    First it was checking mail at work. Then getting around the proxy server. Now it's this bullshit. Christ, grow up. You wonder why you get downsized? You wonder why your company's stock is in the toilet? It's because you are doing everything at work EXCEPT work.

    If the lazy SOB's who post around here spent half as much time working as they do bitching, complaining, playing games, posting here, etc. there never would have been a recession, pets.com might have survived, and Gnome and KDE would be fully compatible with packages completed for everything from Debian to Red Hat to *BSD.

    --
    Jesus was all right but his disciples were thick and ordinary. -John Lennon
  10. Games for who? by prakashj79 · · Score: 5, Funny
    Where are the games for the worker?

    For the non-worker you mean...

    There is a thin line between laid back and laid off

    --
    With profound apologies to whomsoever this sig originally belonged.
  11. BG and Hiding windows from prying eyes... by gabec · · Score: 5, Informative
    OK, I would feel insanely uncomfortable playing a game at work (well, during work hours and without the consent of the work community), but here's an option for those that don't...

    First, Baldur's Gate has a great option... in the Options tab you can set BG to run in a window instead of full-screen. This can kill the playability on older PCs but BG isn't an action game so it's still a viable option.

    Also many games support the (on windows) ALT+ENTER hotkey to switch between normal and full screen mode (like if you're watching a DVD or MPEG you can switch this way).

    But whatever your game of choice, if, unlike at Kasmiur's, your workplace does not allow games, you might want to look into an insanely useful program called "Watchcat." First of all, it's FREEWARE. The program, either by clicks or hotkeys, will hide any or all applications currently running... so if you're a Solitaire freak and you hear someone coming up, smack that hotkey and not only is the game off the desktop, it's off of the taskbar too. This program ROCKS.

    Here's a small article about the program on Tech TV

  12. This is a great game! by Hard_Code · · Score: 5, Funny


    <read slashdot>
    <read slashdot>
    <quickly switch to code editor with complicated source file loaded>
    <read slashdot>
    <read slashdot>
    <read slashdot>
    <quickly switch to terminal and enter a frenzy of mundane 'ls', 'grep' and 'vi' and 'find' commands.>
    <read slashdot>
    <read slashdot>
    <read slashdot>
    ...

    --

    It's 10 PM. Do you know if you're un-American?
  13. Re:this is why the economy is so bad now by Sycraft-fu · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Ummmm, saying that the call centre staff should be doing something else while not taking calls is a silly idea. What are they supposed to do? It's not like employees are magical robots that can do any task you tell them, they are trained to do something, that's what they know what to do. You can't tell a call centre tech to go do something like a router upgrade, they don't know how. When dealing with things like customer service you just have to accept that you need to have people that, at times, will sit around and do nothing. That's just part of the job. I'm sure 3am techs don't get much work in general but know what? I've called in at 3am when my net connection went down, and I expected (being that it's a bussiness line) that someone would be there to take that call and to resolve the issue.

    If you think cutting back on customer service is a good way to save money, think again. It's one of the reasons Qwest is going down in flames.