If you were building a real-time game like one of Zynga's games, the WordPress model wouldn't work well for that.
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
In the web products and services world, you have a real-time interaction with your customers, and then a real-time editing of how you as a company are doing.
There's something interesting about playing live; you're in the moment, and I think it would be beneficial.
What people want is a seamless Web experience.
Games have grown and developed from this limited in-the-box experience to something that's everywhere now. Interactive content is all around us, networked, ready. This is something I've been hoping for throughout my career.
People don't want to leave Facebook to play games - Zynga's phenomenal success is proof of that.
People love to interact in real time, whether it is with each other or with content.
Any virtual community that works, works because people put in some time.
You can't throw money at the Internet to make it work - it really is all about the quality of the content.
The Web meant that I didn't have to schlep a whole bunch of stuff to a museum and fight with all their constraints and make something that, in the end, only 150 people would actually get out to see. Instead, I could put something together in my lab and make it accessible to the world.
All this stuff was done via FTP but the web has put a really nice user interface on it.
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