27
Jan 08

Solipsis: Open-Source P2P Virtual World

For the virtual worlds junkies, another project in development just popped onto my radar screen via Wayne Porter’s report on Solipsis. Funded by ANR – French National Agency for Research, and committed to an open-source P2P architecture, Solipsis appears to be a year into development. Read more at the linked sites.


26
Jan 08

Twitter Updates for 2008-01-26

  • Looking at Exhibit, interactive data-rich webpages: http://simile.mit.edu/exhibit/ #
  • Watching sweatshop jeans factory in second life from salon.. bwah? http://tinyurl.com/yq9xc3 #
  • Srsly trying to wrap my mind around that video, retweeting http://tinyurl.com/yq9xc3 #
  • Nice post @iYan! Missed that one somehow http://tinyurl.com/2r3pvr #
  • @aakelley very wild, shocked to see it in world already #
  • @aakelly Nice! shared it on google reader, this is just the beginning #
  • Logged in SL from AJAX, verrrry weird, I’m there but not. http://67.202.36.196 #
  • Can hear local chat, IM friends, see inventory, but my av isn’t visible even though it shows online. crazy. #
  • @aakelley I think BlogHUD is worth it, definitely. We’re using it in a class of 35 students this term. #
  • @aakelley To help them document their experiences in SL, seems to be working well so far. #
  • @aakelley I use both Ordinal’s twitterbox and Chevalier’s SLTweets in world #
  • cant get mogulus embedded in WP blog, anyone have any tips? WP seems to be stripping it out #
  • @Frans Doh thanks for the typo notice, fixing it now. 🙂 #
  • @aakelley "Growing Up Online" is a MUST watch, esp for parents/teachers http://tinyurl.com/2ewl59 #
  • @malburns HBO has decided SL is a broadcast medium? #

26
Jan 08

Mind Blowing Metaverse

So in trying to get caught up on my feeds, I see that I’ve missed some things and now my brain is trying to resolve all this new info. First up, from Chris Kelley’s blog, Virtual manufacturing in second life, takes us to Salon’s video of virtual factory workers making real jeans. Wow. Chris comments it’s a bit “artsy” but still, I’m shocked to see something like this in world so soon. Worth getting the Salon site pass if you’re not a subscriber.

Then Malburns Writer and Tara Yeats are back with another great option to view SL video clips from all over. Mogulus channel: Metaworld. Currently playing, a Korean broadcast with subtitles. Oh and there’s Draxtor’s show. NICE! This really rocks, if I can get the embed code to work.

[Edit: I can’t get Mogulus to embed in WordPress at all, darn. If anyone has a solution, I’m all ears. Otherwise use the link above to get to Mal’s fab new channel.]

Finally, after reading about it for months, I finally logged into SL from AJAXLife, the SL browser that uses a plain old webpage. It is.. mindblowing. Going to have to make a post over on the new SLED blog about this one.

So you go to the webpage and log in with your SL credentials. Your avatar appears in world, according to friends, looking back and forth in confused fashion. You can’t see yourself, or indeed anything, since you’re using a flat web page interface, but you have access to your friends list, local chat, IM, inventory, map, you can teleport.. it’s like.. using Second Life but being blind – you can’t see, but you can “hear” and TP. It’s .. mindboggling. And definitely an interesting option for students who can’t run SL at home but want to participate in a meeting, or contacting friends from a machine that can’t run SL .. and perhaps might work better with screen readers? I have no idea, but you must check it out.

Today is one of those days where the metaverse just blows my mind.


26
Jan 08

Re: Philip Linden is ‘sad’

Aldon Huffhines responded to a previous post with his own commentary, Philip Linden is ‘sad’. He writes:

“People have commented to me about Linden Lab’s method of dealing with conflict as ‘passive aggressive’. The ranks of people who are getting fed up with the way Linden Lab handles conflict seems to be growing, and the only thing preventing a large exodus is that alternative grids are still in alpha testing. Linden Lab has a little bit of time to repair the damage they’ve caused over the past year, but that time is running out.”

I’d have to agree that there is a level of discontent and disappointment that Linden Lab must address if they wish to keep a large contingent of the current userbase, because it seems like many folks are all too ready to jump ship and the only thing stopping them is that there is no viable alternative. For those who can see past the technical challenges and glitches into what virtual worlds have the potential to be, there is a great impatience for the future to arrive already and it can’t get here soon enough.

If 2007 was the Year of Restrictions, I hope 2008 will be the Year of Good Service, even if all of our desperately wished for improvements (stability, HTML on a prim, more than 25 groups, easy document importing) don’t arrive. For years I supported a thoroughly crappy software product and I know how much goodwill you can buy with truly excellent customer service. Fast, timely, personal responses; acknowledging what’s broken without glossing over the inconvenience it causes; providing work-arounds and alternate solutions – these things can make your customers love you even if the software you’re supporting is total crap. Be in the trenches with them, don’t pretend you care, _actually_ care, and show it.

And that’s where, I think, Linden Lab has failed. Aldon goes on to say:

“This ‘passive aggressive’ nature seems to reflect on a CEO who is ‘sad’ about what is happening and incapable of making any substantive changes to improve the situation.”

I think my take is quite different. While the head of the food chain does set the tone, and has enormous influence over the personality and culture of the organization (if organizations can have such things as personality), I’m not sure I can chalk it all up to a personal failing on Philip Rosedale’s part. Passive-aggressive behavior is avoidant, negative, and deceptive, but I haven’t read Linden Lab’s “personality” as passive aggressive at all. Rather I think there was an element of naivete involved, when SL really hit the hype cycle they weren’t ready. I read much of the last year as a desperate scramble to keep up with the interest, the challenges, the inquiries, the questions. If you’ve ever been the victim of your own success, you know that sudden panic when you realize you’ve reached the tipping point, it happened when you were too busy to notice, and now your whole paradigm has to change to cope with the new reality in a _re-active_ rather than a proactive way. And it takes some time to get back on your feet, to get things in place to be proactive again, and to repair any mis-steps made while you were in full damage control mode.

That’s my take on where things stand, and I hope this year will reflect a real commitment to the users who have helped make Linden Lab and the Second Life platform relevant in our institutions, our workplaces, and our social circles. The best PR is still “word of mouth” and sincere testimonials from people you trust, and a company who has the good will of its heaviest users benefits exponentially from their expertise, their evangelism, and certainly all the free technical support they (we) give.

Loyalty can’t be bought, it can only be earned, and it isn’t a one time deal.

We’ll see what happens moving forward, and I could certainly be wrong, but what I’m hearing in Philip’s (and to some extent Mitch Kapor’s) remarks isn’t passive aggressive, incapable, ducking the responsibility b.s. I heard someone reflecting on a difficult year and acknowledging that it was difficult in spite of the “Philip is ‘sad'” remarks it was sure to generate, and that’s the sort of thing that can go some distance in earning _my_ loyalty. It doesn’t go as far as filing a support ticket and getting a quick, accurate response, though, and the proof will be in the pudding.


26
Jan 08

Identity & Alts

Dusan Writer has an excellent essay on alts in Second Life and I am reminded that I promised someone an essay on identity some time ago and have never gotten around to writing it. It’s probably too early in the morning to write anything coherent, but suffice to say, my Second Life alt experiments have been a dismal failure for anything other than functional purposes since I can’t share friends lists, inventory, or permissions in any meaningful way, and without my friends, my stuff, and access to my builds, it holds no appeal for me except when I need to do research or work on something completely undisturbed.

Still, Dusan Writer’s essay The Place of Alts in Virtual Worlds and Second Life: Possession or Expression is worth the read and sometime when I’m more awake I might get around to that long overdue essay myself.


25
Jan 08

Twitter Updates for 2008-01-25

  • must. sleep. 5AM EST tomorrow, Mitch Kapor live interview on Reuters island, not sure if I’ll make that one. #
  • Heavy SL physics tester friend still seeking access to a Havok4 island, know one? DM me! #
  • SL new search down? Throwing a 503 error for me #
  • Er nevermind, seems to be working now. Weird. #
  • Waves to new friend @strawberryh! haha @gracemcdunnough I wouldn’t be surprised 🙂 #
  • @ProsperoLinden I’m reading that right now for the first time, weird. #
  • TGIF TGIF TGIF #

25
Jan 08

Kapor says “Let’s end the tyranny of geography”


Work is being done to increase the “sense of presence” through better gestures, avatar animations, and interfaces. “If you do the math, the cost savings to do meetings virtually at a distance instead of putting people on planes is enormous,” says Kapor. “Carbon offsets are one of these intermediate solutions, if they are done well they do make a difference.. but it’s like trying to fill a bathtub with the stopper open. I see this causal change from 3D cameras, body language, more realistic intereaction, to make virtual worlds more useful not just for people who want to explore a different identity.. but ending the tyranny of geography [through virtual meetings] is important.”
posted by Fleep Tuque on Reuters using a blogHUD : [blogHUD permalink]


25
Jan 08

Mitch Kapor says “Second Life is in the DOS Era”


Linden Lab Chairman Mitch Kapor acknowledges that Second Life is still difficult to use, but says Second Life will be as big as the internet and will merge with the internet, but only if it is open like the internet. Will Linden Lab and Second Life make it to that point? “Well,” says Mitch, “That’s the 64 bllion dollar question, it’s like a video game, you have to win on earlier levels but that just gives you a ticket to play the next round, if you look at other disruptive technologies, the companies that did well early on didn’t necessarily reap the big benefits at the end.”
posted by Fleep Tuque on Reuters using a blogHUD : [blogHUD permalink]


24
Jan 08

Twitter Updates for 2008-01-24

  • I think there’s going to be a live interview with Robert Scoble on Reuters here in a sec. from World Economic Forum #
  • Scoble interview live from the World Economiic Forum in Davos starting soon: http://slurl.com/secondlife/Reuters/78/107/21 #

24
Jan 08

Scoble Interview Part 1


Robert talking about the recent flap with Facebook, in which his account was flagged and disappeared temporarily due to a script he ran to “scrape” his Facebook friend contact data to import into another service. Robert points out that the script he ran was functionally the same script that _Facebook_ runs to scrape data from Gmail. The biggest issue with Facebook’s current system, according to Robert, is if you are suspected of doing something bad, they ERASE you and there is no review process, which he sees as a problematic process. He also asks, what does “friending” mean on these systems?
posted by Fleep Tuque on Reuters using a blogHUD : [blogHUD permalink]