The other day I was thinking about the amazing power of these online "games": Someone sitting in their home in Germany can be playing an online game with another person in California. They can see the same information, they can talk to each other, and they can interact in real time; they can also see and interact with hundreds of other people. All you need is an XBox, or other gaming device, a cheap headset, inexpensive online access to a basic game, and you're ready to go. It seems easy for anyone to collaborate in this way, and very natural.
I started to think about PLM, and wondered why we cannot have this kind of collaboration in our daily work. Are you telling me that a $500 XBox with a cheap game, and a few added gadgets has more power to collaborate than my $30k worth of PLM hardware and software? This just doesn't make any sense.
Then, the other day, I saw a demonstration of this kind of technology: three people were working on a solid model all at the same time using this kind of technology. Of course, the model was on the cloud on a server somewhere, but all three people were making changes to the model and adding features, and all three people saw the same updates at the same time. These people were able to communicate about the changes, and work together in real time! Now, that's collaboration!

Maybe PLM vendors should add guns, magic spells, and fun characters to our daily work. Instead of logging in as just plain old Engineer1, wouldn't you like to log in as: "Level 34 Spell-casting Shaman"?
What do you think? Can these gaming technologies make an impact on how we collaborate with PLM?
- Jim