Sansar: news and updates from the media and from the Lab

Danger Linden (centre left) and Troy Linden (centre right) discuss Second Life and Project Sansar with Draxtor Despres and Saffia Widdershins at SL12B
Danger Linden (centre left) and Troy Linden (centre right) discuss Second Life and Project Sansar with Draxtor Despres and Saffia Widdershins at SL12B

Linden Lab’s next generation virtual worlds platform, code-named Project Sansar made the news in Second Life and in the media on Thursday, June 25th.

In the media, Bernadette Tansley, writing in Xconomy covers how Second Life Creator Linden Lab Prepares To Test Parallel VR Universe, delving into the forthcoming closed alpha testing for the new platform, which we know to be code-named Sansar.

In terms of Sansar news, the article specifies:

  • It can already run at 75 frames per second
  • The Lab plans to accelerate the platform to 90 frames per second to sync with specifications expected for the Oculus Rift and other headsets
  • The initial closed alpha, involving a limited number of creators experienced in the use of Maya, will commence in July 2015
  • If all goes according to plan, the programme will gradually be expanded to a more public beta testing phase around the first half of 2016
  • A “version 1.0” of the platform might be ready by the end of 2016.

Outside of LL and Sansar, the article is interesting in that it suggests Cloud Party, which was acquired by Yahoo in 2014, is still in the running to develop a virtual world that can be operated with the upcoming new range of VR headsets, etc.,  alongside the Lab, Philip Rosedale’s High Fidelity and new start-up AltspaceVR.

You can read the entire piece by following the Xconomy link given above.

Drax, Danger Linden, Troy Linden and Saffia at the Meet the Lindens at SL12B
Drax, Danger Linden, Troy Linden and Saffia at the Meet the Lindens at SL12B

During an interview with Danger Linden, Sr. Director, Product, Virtual Worlds and Troy Linden, Senior Producer, held as a part of the SL12B Meet the Lindens series of conversations, the subject matter inevitably came around to Project Sansar, and the following tidbits of information were given.

Further confirmations of Known Basics

  • SL users will be able to use there SL identities with Project Sansar if they wish
  • Linden dollars will be the transaction currency / tokens on Project Sansar
  • Both voice and text will be supported in Sansar for chatting / communications.

However, neither of the above mean you’ll be able to teleport directly from SL to Sansar or vice-versa; both are separate entities.

“Master” Accounts

Users will be able to have a “master account”, under which they can then have multiple avatar accounts they can use.

  • The “master account” will be known only to the user and Linden Lab, and will use an e-mail address as the main form of authentication
  • Users can create multiple avatar accounts (or “persona names” as Danger Linden referred to them) under this “master” account, which they can use to access Sansar, and will be known to other users only by the avatar account they are using
  • Inventory and account balances will apparently be associated with the “master account”, allowing them to be shared between the avatar accounts under the master account
  • It is not clear what format avatar / persona names will take, and whether it will be a first name, last name format.

(The idea of having a “master account” with this kind of flexibility has long been on users’ wish lists for Second Life for a long time – see JIRA SVC-6212 and my own article from 2011 on the subject. As such, this is liable to be a popular move among those SL users interested in trying Second Life.)

Anonymity and Trust

Sansar users will be able to have as much anonymity as they wish. However, the more information that users provide to Linden Lab – be it wallet identity, a verified e-mail address or payment information – the more capabilities they’ll have in-world.

The idea here is to try to address the issue of griefing while still maintaining a relatively low barrier to entry – obviously, the easier it is to access the platform, the easier it is for muppets to run amok. So, the idea is that as more information is provided, the greater the level of trust established between user and Lab, allowing people to “do more” in-world and participate more. However, the exact relationship between platform capabilities awarded, and the information users will be asked to provide in order to access them, is still being determined.

Obviously, the content of the information you provide to the Lab remains private and confidential (i.e. if you supply a verified e-mail address, that e-mail address is not revealed to any other users). However, if a verified e-mail is required to, say, publish a Sansar “world”, then the fact that you have published that world will tell other users you have a verified e-mail with the Lab.

Mesh, Terrain and Building Tools

  • Sansar content will obviously be focused on mesh – but not necessarily exclusively mesh
  • The terrain will be voxels
  • Subject to further confirmation, it should be possible to also build in-world objects using voxels
  • Maya is the tool that is being used purely to assist with testing when the closed alpha commences. It will not be the only tool, and it will not be the sole tool for content creation (see Ebbe Altberg’s comments on alpha access and tools from the Virtual Worlds Best Practice in Education, March 2015)
  • A goal for Project Sansar is for people to be able to build in-world and to share in collaborative building
  • Sansar will include a full “professional” (in terms of its capabilities not in the need for people to have to be professional animators in order to use it) animation system, which will be based on Havoc animations (Havoc being the SL physical system),  overlaid with additional capabilities  / code directly from the Lab
  • All objects in Sansar will be fully scriptable and animated; it is not clear whether on-the-fly modifications to mesh items in-world will be possible
  • It is acknowledged that content creation tools can be a barrier to adoption / use; it is therefore a goal with Sansar to “make it easier to make things in Sansar than it is in Second Life”

Continue reading “Sansar: news and updates from the media and from the Lab”

Short profile: Bjorn Laurin, VP of Product at Linden Lab

Speaking at the Meet the Lindens series at SL12B on Thursday, June 25th, Danger Linden (Don Laabs), Senior Director of Product, Virtual Worlds indicated that, having been running both Second Life and the Lab’s next generation virtual worlds platform (code-named Project Sansar) had relinquished management of the latter to his boss – Bjorn Linden (Bjorn Laurin), the Lab’s (relatively speaking) new Vice President of Product.

Mr. Laurin’s appointment slipped in somewhat under the radar around the end of March, 2015, most likely at the end of March / beginning of April.  His official bio at the Lab reads:

Bjorn Laurin, the Lab's VP of Product, directly managing Project Sansar
Bjorn Laurin, the Lab’s VP of Product, directly managing Project Sansar

Bjorn Laurin serves as the VP of Product for Linden Lab, and to that role he brings more than a decade of Web, mobile, and social networking industry experience. Prior to joining Linden Lab, Bjorn held several high-level management positions at MySpace and Yahoo!. His previous roles include VP and General Manager of Mobile at Myspace, VP of Product for Tagged, and VP of Product for Peel.

Before that, he was Director of Mobile for Yahoo!, where he launched the company’s first mobile advertising solution in the Americas, Asia Pacific, and Europe. Bjorn studied Economics and Social Geography at the Universities of Uppsala and Stockholm, Sweden.

Mr. Laurin’s time at Yahoo! spans almost a decade, during which he worked in Sweden, the UK and the USA. He was at Myspace for some 3 years, with a year-long stint at Fox Interactive Media between the two.

That Mr. Laurin has such an in-depth and extensive background in mobile technology and services may have some Second Life users questioning his appointment on the grounds that “he has no experience” with virtual worlds. While the latter may be true, the Lab does have plenty of experience with virtual worlds, and Mr. Laurin has a lot of experience in product development and delivery, and in management – all of which would appear to be ideal qualifications for the role at the Lab.

Furthermore, it’s worth remembering that the Lab’s next generation platform is designed to be accessible through multiple means and services – of which, mobile will be a central part (it is, after all, something Second Life users have been wanting), ergo, having someone with the knowledge and experience on managing mobile related projects in a senior position at the Lab makes a lot of sense.

So, a belated welcome to Mr. Laurin from those of us in Second Life, and a quick note to say I’ll have more on Project Sansar in an upcoming article.

Art and artistry at SL12B: a personal selection

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David DuCasse celebrates the work of visionary and dreamer, Georges Méliès

Art is always well represented at SLB events, and 2015 is no exception; there are a lot of art focused parcels scattered throughout the celebratory regions, as well as those which have been judged by the organisers to be worthy of special recognition.

It’s fair to say that the event can offer a great introduction to the many and varied forms of artistic expression that can be found within Second Life, and such is the range of art on display throughout SL12B, I’m not going to attempt to cover everything; rather what I offer here are some of the parcels that I’ve particularly enjoyed visiting this year, and why.

Loki Eliot – Childhood Dreams

Digital mischief maker Loki Eliot is one of Second Life’s great creative talents – his magnificent cake stage from SL11BCC remains one of the stand-out build from 2014, while his SL10BCC Behemoth will long stand in people’s memory, combining originality, mesh, storytelling and metaphor into one of the most entertaining visits of the 2013 celebrations.

Loki Eliot - Childhood Dreams
Loki Eliot – Childhood Dreams

This year, he uses the forthcoming Experience Keys to take people on a journey; a story combining drawings, mesh constructions, voice and imagination to demonstrate the freedom Second Life gives people to rediscover the joys of childhood and childhood dreams, and show just why child avatars are so popular within the platform.

Loki Eliot - Childhood Dreams
Loki Eliot – Childhood Dreams

He does so with a beautiful story visitors are invited to travel through and share; a story without  the need to couch anything in matters of unhappy childhoods or metaphor or anything else; but which rather shows the unbridled joy of escape that can be found, of sharing something which – for whatever reason may have been lost or denied at an earlier age. In doing so, he also blows away the fog of misconception surrounding people’s self-expression through child avatars and offers a gentle, engaging challenge to those who persist in looking upon other who use child avatars with doubt and suspicion. This is a brilliant and captivating piece, and one that should not be overlooked by anyone visiting SL12BCC.

Juliana Lethdetter – Second Life Maps

I first visited Juliana’s marvellous collection of Second Life Maps back in 2012 (you can read about that visit here). For anyone remotely interested in Second Life’s history, it is a must-see destination (and one overdue for an update visit for this blog!). So it was with delight that I found her display at SL12B enjoying a prominent position just across the road from the main auditorium building.

Juliana Lethdetter - Second Life Maps
Juliana Lethdetter – Second Life Maps

In many respects, the idea that Second Life is a world is actually an illusion; while we can cross the mainland continents, and in some cases travel between continents and some estates, it simply is not possible to travel the entire “world” without resorting to the use of of the teleport – even, at times, for the simple act of visiting a neighbouring region.

But, the fact is that the illusion is a consensual one; we all freely engage in it; and through it, we gain more of a sense of place within Second life than might otherwise be the case. The rich diversity of maps which have been created over the years, both by the Lab and by residents, is both testament to the power of this consensual illusion, and a means of really understanding just how vast and diverse this digital realm really is – as Juliana beautifully reminds us:

 The collective dreaming of Second Life Residents past and present
has resulted in the creation of a unique consensual reality:
a shared imaginal space far greater than the sum of its individual parts.

Ziki Questi – Matter and Memory

When it comes to SL photography, I wish I had just an ounce of the talent Ziki Questi consistently displays in her work. She has a eye for subject, composition, depth of field, colour, and framing that always has me in awe.

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Ziki Questi – Matter and Memory

Matter and Memory presents a series of Ziki’s images captured from around Second Life between 2011 and 2015, which range from landscapes through unique takes on art installations through to the “not possible in real life” category, where the builds and creations to be found in Second Life far outstrip anything to be imagined or created in the physical world.

Ast-4_001
Ziki Questi – Matter and Memory

The images displayed represent regions past and present, offering something of a glimpse of Second Life’s history through the lens of an exceptional photographer, all of which are shown in what is, for me, one of the most visually appealing pavilions in SL12B, designed Anthony (ADudeNamed Anthony).

Continue reading “Art and artistry at SL12B: a personal selection”

Windlight: a new magazine for art in Second Life

WindlightWindlight is the the title of a new arts magazine for Second Life which will be launching in July 2015.

Founded by John (Johannes1977 Resident), himself a SL photographer and also RFL of SL activist, Windlight brings together a talented team to cover art in all its forms in SL with monthly news, reviews, articles, interviews, commentary and more.

A joint venture with AviChoice Productions, organisers of the the Avi Choice Awards and publishers of Avi Choice Magazine, Windlight’s goal is to cover the Second Life art scene and to support  artists, photographers, galleries, and art-related events. The first issue will feature artist Bryn Oh, and photographer Skip Staheli alongside Sasun Steinbeck, Nikki Mathieson and more.

When I call the team behind the magazine talented, I’m not exaggerating. Joining John, who is the magazine’s co-publisher and editor as well is its founder, are: Nikki Mathieson, owner of Avi Choice Productions and Windlight’s co-publisher, Jessi2009 Warrhol, the magazine’s Marketing Manager, together with contributing writers Emma Portilo and Shakti Adored.

Windlight brings together a talented team: John (Johannes1977 Resident), Founder, Publisher & Editor In Chief; Nikki Mathieson, Co-Publisher & Owner of Avi Choice Productions; Jessii2009 Warrhol, Marketing; Emma Portilo, Featured Contributor and Shakti Adored, Featured Contributor
Windlight brings together a talented team: John (Johannes1977 Resident), Founder, Publisher & Editor In Chief; Nikki Mathieson, Co-Publisher & Owner of Avi Choice Productions; Jessii2009 Warrhol, Marketing; Emma Portilo, Featured Contributor and Shakti Adored, Featured Contributor

The Windlight Magazine Art Gallery Fellowship Programme

As a part of the magazine’s desire to help promote and support artists and photographers, Windlight is launching the Windlight Magazine Art Gallery Fellowship Programme. this offers those accepted into it with gallery space free of charge for a period of 30 days.

Applications are now being taken for the first round of awards, so if you are interested, do make sure to check the application guidelines and complete the application form.

The Windlight Gallery will provide free space to artists under the Windlight Fellowship Programme
The Windlight Gallery will provide free space to artists under the Windlight Fellowship Programme

Commenting on the magazine as we discussed the upcoming first edition, John said, “In establishing Windlight, we hope to provide a means by which the rich, incredible diversity of art within Second Life can be more broadly enjoyed and appreciated, by both Second Life users and, hopefully, an audience beyond the platform as well.”

As someone who genuinely appreciates art within Second Life, that’s a vision I can fully support, and I am both honoured proud to say that I’ll be joining Windlight from August 2015 as a contributing writer. I’m really looking forward to the opportunity; joining the team will not only allow me to extend my friendship with John and Jessi, both of whom I’ve come to know by way of Relay for Life; but will also further increase my own understanding of, and appreciation for, art in general.

So – keep your eyes out for Windlight this July!

The Second Life Music Fest

L12B Community Celebration; Inara Pey, June 2015, on FlickrSL12B: Ixtlan Stage – Cube Republic, June 2015 (Flickr)

To mark SL12B, Linden Lab announced in May that they’d be holding a live Music Festival, and went on to hold auditions for artists and groups at Feed A Smile’s Lavender Fields.

On Wednesday, June 24th, the Lab announced the official dates and schedule for the Festival (although the keen-eyed would have already noted it on the SL12BCC event schedule, where the line-up has been available as well).

The event will take place at Cube Republic’s excellent Ixtlan Stage over the course of Friday, June 26th and Saturday June 27th.

The full line-up for the event reads as follows – all times SLT:

Friday, June 26th
Saturday, June 27th
11:00: Alazarin Mondrian 20:00: Mavenn Resident
11:30: The Pink Vampire 20:30: Oblee
Noon: Tamra Hayden 21:00: Collin Martin
12:30: Effinjay 21:30: Taunter Goodnight
13:00: Amforte Clarity 22:00: Donn DeVore
13:30: Isabella Rumsford 22:30: Zak Claxton
14:00: Tempio Breil 23:00: LuvofMusic
14:30: Phoenix J 23:30: Ren Enberg & Quai Franklin

The line-up has been selected to represent a broad cross-section of live music in Second Life, and the auditions proved popular among musicians and residents in the audience alike.

As well as hearing great music, the festival offers a further opportunity for exploring the Ixtlan stage build. Cube’s design really is amazing, and time taken to enter the caverns and walk through them really is highly recommended.

Ixtlan Stage - Cube Republic
SL12B: Ixtlan Stage – Cube Republic, June 2015

Happy Anniversary, Second Life!

L12B Community Celebration; Inara Pey, June 2015, on FlickrSL12B Welcome area by Walton F. Wainwright (Faust Steamer), June 2015 (Flickr)

We all call it a birthday, but the reality is that June 23rd actually marks an anniversary: that of the public opening of Second Life  in 2003 to anyone wishing to come aboard and find out what it is all about.

Second Life was actually “born” some time before that. Depending on your point-of-view it could be said that its “real” birthday was either March 2002, as Linden World morphed into a very alpha Second Life, or perhaps October 2002, when the closed beta started; or even April 2003, when the open beta launched.

Nevertheless, whether birthday or anniversary, reaching 12 years of public access is a remarkable achievement by anyone’s standards when it comes to what is essentially an IT platform, and the fact is that Second Life – despite the doom and gloom and dire predictions that frequently pour forth as to its future – is still in pretty robust health and remains a source of enjoyment to so many, is something that should be celebrated.

SL12B Community Celebration; Inara Pey, June 2015, on FlickrSL12B Wondrous: Juliana Lethdetter’s Second Life Maps, June 2015 (Flickr)

Over the span of years, we’ve seen Second Life grow from humble origins to become one of the longest running and, arguably, one of the most successful virtual world environments yet created. Yes, the total number of active users may never have got much beyond the one million mark, but in some ways this hardly matters. The fact is that Second Life has become a strong, vibrant set of intertwined communities and groups; a place where creativity can be freely expressed almost howsoever we can imagine.

It allows people from all over the world to congregate, to share in experiences and activities and one another’s lives; it is a place where friendships – even relationships – can form between those who otherwise would never meet, much less spend time together. Through it, many have found an outlet for their digital creative talents, while others have found an audience for their singing and song writing, and others have found it a means of incredible artistic expression.

SL12B Community Celebration; Inara Pey, June 2015, on Flickr
SL12B Pizzazz: Mistero Hifeng with David DuCasse / leydi Yifu beyond, June 2015 (Flickr)

And throughout that time, the platform has continued to evolve, to meet the ever more complicated and broad ranging demands we place upon it. Thus, over the years we’ve seen the arrival of private regions, of better and more capable scripting capabilities, visual enhancements such as windlight and materials, support for different means of content creation – notably mesh, and so on. And it has remained a highly successful means for many to generate an income of their own.

What’s more, all of this has been done – particularly over the last five years – with little or no major upset to people’s ability to access a world we expect to be ready and waiting for us at any given minute of the day, 24 hours a day, 7 days a week.

When you think about it, this is a level of availability that is quite stunning, and which many other services are hard pushed to provide. Even more so when you consider the overwhelming complexity of Second Life. Not just the simulators, and their need to support a wealth of content we, the collective residents, can between us pretty much change at will; but all the additional (and all-too-often ignored) back-end systems that must always be available non-stop in order for us to be able talk, share, buy, wear, render, and so on.

Of course there have been lows as well as highs over the years. Some of these have been over-exaggerated with the passage of time, others do speak of missteps along the way. There have been the inevitable upsets and times when the Lab and residents have seemed pretty much at odds with one another. But that’s to be expected where people feel passionately about something, and into which they have poured so much of their time, effort and talent.

L12B Community Celebration; Inara Pey, June 2015, on FlickrSL12B Dreamitarium by Anthony (ADudeNamed Anthony), June 2015 (Flickr)

Perhaps the worst period in SL’s long history came in 2008/09, when it did seem there was a prevailing desire within some of those running the company to see the platform turned away from the open, creative and collaborative platform which has marked its success, and into something altogether more business-oriented in outlook and use.  That year also marked the whole OpenSpace / Homestead region situation which caused considerable bad feeling, and which could be said to have gone on to have repercussions through the period 2010-2013.

But when taken as a whole, low points such as these are really in the minority. By-and-large, Second life has been for all of us who continue to engage in it, a positive and rewarding  experience. After all, if it were otherwise, would we actually still be here? And that goes for the staff at the Lab as well, all of whom, I think it fair to say, are as enthusiastic for, and engaged with, the platform as any resident, even if we don’t often get to see it directly. After all, were they not, why should they keep working at the Lab?

L12B Community Celebration; Inara Pey, June 2015, on FlickrSL12B Electrify: Pixel Sideways’ Ethereal, June 2015 (Flickr)

Second Life has been – and remains a quite remarkable adventure; one that obviously retains a huge amount of appeal for all of us who come to it, often on a daily basis. It’s a place where a part of us, no matter how small, does find fulfilment and enjoyment. Hence why it is right that we do celebrate just what a technical and social feat Second life really is, and what it means to all of us.

And when you think about it, while 12 years a a long time, it still means Second Life has yet to enter its teens, so there is plenty of promise of life to come – and with it, dreams aplenty to share.

Happy Anniversary, Second Life – and here’s to many more!

SL12B Community Celebration; Inara Pey, June 2015, on FlickrThe Cake Stage – Miktaki Slade, June 2015 (Flickr)

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