Nolan Bushnell, the founder of Atari and Chuck E Cheese, wants to bring the video arcade in the classroom. His last start speed is called to learn, and very little is known about it. But it was just on a panel I moderated at VC Summit on Education in New York, where he showed a little more of his game plan. I took her on video after the sign (look above).
Essentially, the speed of knowledge, which does not even have a Web site, is a startup that wants to bring new education video games in the classroom. Like, real, video games arcade."Think Dance Dance Revolution meets step" meets educational software. On the panel he talked about treadmills with attached screens where children learn very actively. I joked that he was trying to catch up with the creation of a generation of children who were sitting in front of TV sets of video playback.