I started reading it yesterday. At first I was really enjoying it but then I had a sense of frustration, because the text kept leading me to believe I was going to dive into a real case study, but it glossed over the real life example and kept going. For example, it tossed out an early real life example of a digital artist using game theory to evaluate different pricing strategies. But it never went deeper into which pricing strategy the person had chosen and why. In the next chapter it did something similar. I found this glossing over annoying.
Also I felt it was using too many different real life examples instead of sticking with one and really showing how game theory was applied and what effect this had.
Yeah, I noticed that too. I'm not sure what the best way to deal with that is. I'm thinking either steer it away from trying to use "real-life" examples.
I started reading it yesterday. At first I was really enjoying it but then I had a sense of frustration, because the text kept leading me to believe I was going to dive into a real case study, but it glossed over the real life example and kept going. For example, it tossed out an early real life example of a digital artist using game theory to evaluate different pricing strategies. But it never went deeper into which pricing strategy the person had chosen and why. In the next chapter it did something similar. I found this glossing over annoying.
Also I felt it was using too many different real life examples instead of sticking with one and really showing how game theory was applied and what effect this had.
Hope that makes sense.
Yeah, I noticed that too. I'm not sure what the best way to deal with that is. I'm thinking either steer it away from trying to use "real-life" examples.