The president of games giant Nintendo has said he fears for the future of the industry and has warned that it must innovate or die.
Satoru Iwata told BBC News Online that the industry had become obsessed with faster processors and better graphics. He said unless things changed people "would get tired of games". Mr Iwata was speaking after the launch of its new handheld console, the Nintendo DS. The new machine, unusually, features two screens and games can be controlled by using a touch screen and voice recognition, as well as the conventional method of pressing buttons.
'Beef up'
"We are concerned about the current direction of the industry," said Mr Iwata. "Looking at the past 20 years, as long as we could beef up the processing power, as long as we could make computer graphics approach realism, then people were excited about the result. "Some of the people in the industry still believe we can simply beef up the current technology in order to provide a constant supply of games to people.
News source: BBC News
Satoru Iwata told BBC News Online that the industry had become obsessed with faster processors and better graphics. He said unless things changed people "would get tired of games". Mr Iwata was speaking after the launch of its new handheld console, the Nintendo DS. The new machine, unusually, features two screens and games can be controlled by using a touch screen and voice recognition, as well as the conventional method of pressing buttons.
'Beef up'
"We are concerned about the current direction of the industry," said Mr Iwata. "Looking at the past 20 years, as long as we could beef up the processing power, as long as we could make computer graphics approach realism, then people were excited about the result. "Some of the people in the industry still believe we can simply beef up the current technology in order to provide a constant supply of games to people.
Ballmer also reinforced the ongoing priority of security-related issues and improvements.
"In order to take advantage of new business opportunities and effectively manage upfront and lifetime IT costs, it's important for customers to look at the entire IT life cycle - from application development to operations and management - and to choose a software platform that provides strong tools, ecosystem partnerships, security and support," Ballmer said. "The tools and technologies Microsoft is delivering today help customers work effectively and efficiently in distributed environments and across disciplines to drive growth and respond to change."
Microsoft Tech*Ed is Microsoft's premier technical training event, offering more than 400 sessions delivered by industry experts. More than 11,000 people are attending Tech*Ed 2004 - an increase of more than 22 percent over Tech*Ed 2003.
Visual Studio 2005 Team System Delivers Powerful Life-Cycle Tools
As businesses look to transform their IT organisations from a cost centre to a catalyst for overall growth, IT professionals seek to continually improve the efficiency and predictability of their infrastructure. Managing the life cycle of software development is a critically important component to overall business success and has become increasingly challenging as software teams become more specialised and geographically distributed. This effort is part of Microsoft's Dynamic Systems Initiative (DSI), an industrywide initiative focused on management of the entire application life cycle.
Unveiled today, Visual Studio 2005 Team System delivers productive, integrated and extensible software life-cycle tools that enable businesses to reduce the complexity of delivering service-oriented solutions. The Visual Studio 2005 Team System contains several tightly integrated design, development and testing tools that foster greater collaboration between architects, developers and IT professionals throughout the IT life cycle. Expanding on Microsoft's proven success in delivering highly productive developer tools, the Visual Studio Team System increases the predictability of the software development process, shortens the development life cycle, and enables IT departments to deliver greater business value.
Visual Studio 2005 Team System creates even more opportunities for the Visual Studio
partner ecosystem. Global systems integrators, service providers and tools vendors all play a vital role in complementing and extending the Microsoft Visual Tools family to customers. Today, Borland Software Corp., Compuware Corp., EDS, Telelogic AB and Unisys Corp. announced their support for Visual Studio 2005 Team System.
Partners can take advantage of the integration benefits of the Visual Studio 2005 Team System, giving customers a broad choice of development tool options. "We believe Microsoft's entry into application life-cycle management is evidence that the industry is maturing, and will even further expand for leaders like Borland that have years of experience in the space and a set of mature products already available to customers," said Dale Fuller, CEO of Borland Software. "Borland looks forward to continuing its long-standing collaborative relationship with Microsoft to deliver high-quality solutions for our mutual customers."
Systems integrators can extend the Visual Studio 2005 Team System and Microsoft's process guidance and prescriptive architectures to gain greater predictability in the development process.
"Visual Studio 2005 Team System offers maximum productivity using integrated tools while lowering risk and project-related costs through increased and continuous visibility into the overall project. This allows EDS to increase business agility for clients through configurable guidance, architectural guidance and life-cycle tools built on Windows Server System," said Stan Alexander, vice president of Technology Strategy & Architecture at EDS.
Facilitating Service Orientation With More Secure Web Services
Microsoft's service-orientation strategy focuses on enabling customers to integrate new and existing systems composed of heterogeneous technologies with Web services. To help developers build interoperable, security-enhanced Web services solutions, Microsoft today announced the immediate availability of Web Services Enhancements 2.0 for Microsoft .NET (WSE), a free add-on to Microsoft Visual Studio .NET and the .NET Framework.
Today more than 250,000 developers use WSE to build security-enhanced Web services that help improve business processes within and beyond corporate trust boundaries. Customers such as HP, the Ohio State University Medical Center, EDGAR Online Inc. and Siemens AG are already experiencing the benefits of developing advanced Web services solutions based on WSE 2.0.
The Ohio State University Medical Centre required a solution that allowed authorised users to remotely and more securely monitor, record and replay generated vital-signs data and correlate this data with medications administered in the operating room.
"Microsoft was the only company that offered an implementation of the Web services protocol specifications (WS-Security, WS-Trust, WS-Policy, WS-SecureConversation) required to make the project a success," said professor Furrukh Khan, director of technology for the Collaborative for Applied Software Technology, Electrical and Computer Engineering at The Ohio State University. "By using WSE 2.0, we were able to focus on the solution's business logic instead of writing security code. WS-Policy allowed us to simply install digital certificates and write a few hundred lines of XML that describes how the Web services are to use them. Another big enabler was WS-SecureConversation, which gave us the security that was required without sacrificing performance."
WSE 2.0 enables developers to build advanced Web services using the latest protocol specifications. Developers can use WSE to more easily enhance Web services security by incorporating WS-Security (based on the 2004 Organization for the Advancement of Structured Information Standards (OASIS) standard), including WS-Policy, WS-Security Policy, WS-Trust and WS-SecureConversation.
Additional features include extensible transports, support for custom policies, the ability to host Web services independent from IIS, and asynchronous messaging based on the WS-Addressing specification.
To further support integration of systems using security-enhanced Web services, Microsoft also announced the Technology Preview release of the BizTalk Server Adapter for WSE 2.0. Using this adapter, BizTalk Server customers can easily orchestrate new business processes out of security-enhanced, autonomous Web services, creating further levels of business agility using service-orientation design principles.
Using Web Services to Help Information Workers and Developers Harness the Power of Microsoft Office for IT
The Microsoft Office Editions are some of the most widely used applications in enterprises today, but customers typically have to leave the Microsoft Office experience when they want to access many kinds of business data. Developers now have the opportunity to create intelligent business solutions that address today's demanding business requirements while giving information workers the powerful, familiar user interface of the Microsoft Office Editions. In order to enable software developers to more powerfully leverage existing systems and information even when it is stored in multiple disparate back-end systems, Microsoft today released the technical beta of the Microsoft Office Information Bridge Framework.
The Information Bridge Framework provides developers with a set of tools and components to quickly and cost-effectively build smart client solutions that connect Microsoft Office Professional Edition 2003 to multiple enterprise systems via Web services. Information Bridge reduces the costs of solution development for IT professionals and increases flexibility and manageability of Office-based information integration solutions.
In addition, Information Bridge-based solutions empower information workers to easily find, access and work with line-of-business information within the familiar Microsoft Office environment.
The Information Bridge Framework provides the following:
* A client-side component that interprets XML markup, which describes the Information Bridge-based solution behaviour, including its user interface and user actions
* A server-side component that enables Web services to expose the data, views and actions embodied by line-of-business applications
* Information Bridge Metadata Designer, a plug-in for the Microsoft Visual Studio .NET development system that creates and manages solution metadata
"We're very excited about the possibilities of the Information Bridge Framework. Not only does it make it easier for our developers to build and manage integrated solutions that connect Office to our enterprise, but it also improves the productivity of our employees by building upon the Microsoft Office user interface," said Ken Meidell, chief information officer at Cascade Designs. "We were able to save money and improve our product development process significantly by building upon Information Bridge and Office."

I myself have gotten EXTREMELY BORED of EVERY type of game...nothing new to keep me going!!!
People ask me why I play SNES, Sega and Commodore games on my Xbox... Isn't it obvious that today's games are primarily about looks, not gameplay... Sigh...
1. People dun give a F*** about gameplay anymore instead they just looks the graphics thats kinda sad =/
2. The more powerful is better thats the ideology of this new generation of consoles (at least thats what sony and microsoft thinks and why not pc gamers).
They need to make 'NEW' games.
How adult of you.
Sony and MS need to learn that just flooding the market w/ half ass games is not the way to go either. Looking back on the PSX and PS2, sure there are a ton of games on these platforms but how many are actually good games? I can guarantee that the bad out weigh the good.
Not really.. That stuff may make a game more appealing, but there are those of us who will still plat plaintext adventures and CGA style games, because of the gameplay.
Everyone's known this for a long time, all he's done is state the obvious.
I think he watched HeyHey16K and realised.
Sinclair was a true god.
So true, so very, very true.
and then hopefully the storylined adventure game will come back in all its glory
Btw say the Hey Hey 16k thing, lovin it!!
Gameplay is irrelevant surely, it is overall experience that matters. Do you enjoy a game or not? Surely the point of a 'game' is for it to be 'fun' hence why it is called a game. A game could have what one person terms as 'gameplay' by the bucket load but if the gamer isn't enjoying his/her experience then they will not play it anymore.
Games are all about having fun... and thats where it becomes apparent that everyone has a differing definition of what they see as fun, making it a shot in the dark to please as many gamers as possible.
For example.. someone above mentioned they still like playing text adventures because of the gameplay... well, funnily enough i don't. I find them boring and not stimulating enough for me to call 'fun'. Thats not to say other people find the gameplay exhilerating.
So it's the overall gaming experience and it's ability to engage the user, whether it's through 'gameplay' - storyline, graphics or whatever, that will influence the gamers decision on whether to keep on playing.
envision
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