Hey all -- thanks very much for your comments. julzerator, glad you liked the article. I do hope you get the opportunity to talk to young women in your area. Mentorship is so valuable.
Bongo Bill, I agree that there is a technology gap, but I believe it is closing. Believe it or not things like MySpace are actually assisting in that. They seem primitive but dealing with MySpace itself is not wholly uncomplicated... in large part due to the poor engineering of the site! Getting an attractive site layout there is no small task, and I wouldn't be surprised if the girls who figure out how to do it -- and a lot of them spend a large amount of time doing so -- conclude that this computer stuff ain't all that hard. Now that social networking sites and other spots on the Internet are showing them that there's something here for them, too, it will only be a natural following step for them to be carving out their own spaces and figuring out how to create their own versions of these sites.
Zac, I would agree with you that I'd like to see more thought-involved gameplay and I do personally believe that social engineering is the next step. Most games these days will have some kind of group connectivity feature to them, even if it's just leaderboard sharing, and online communities are becoming the norm rather than the exception. This is happening inside and outside the game industry, and it will change the way we operate as a society, both for good and ill, I think. I doubt that gaming as we know it is going to face any kind of extinction anytime soon, but the audience will continue to broaden and deepen in connectivity as these kinds of mechanics become standard expectation among the playerbases.
Thanks again for your comments, all, I appreciate them!