Lab adds SL Mobile User Group to in-world meetings

Campwich Forest grounds: location for the Monthly Mobile User Group (MMUG)

In response to various requests, Linden Lab has announced that a new in-world user group meeting is to launch at the end of January 2025.

The announcement of the Mobile Monthly User Group (MMUG) was made (oddly) via a Feedback portal post by Bridie Linden (have Linden Lab completely given up using their own blogs to make announcement?), who noted:

We will be using WebRTC Voice and text to share updates and listen to feedback. Use the Second Life desktop viewer or Second Life Mobile to join the conversation. We look forward to seeing you there!

– Bridie Linden

The meetings will take place as follows:

  • Last Thursday every month, commencing Thursday, January 30th, 2025.
  • Time: 12:00 noon SLT.
  • Location: Campwich Forest.

The new meeting brings the current total of Second Life active user group meetings to seven (with the Governance user group currently on hiatus). The other active meetings are:

  • The Simulator User Group:
    • Purpose: to discuss simulator issues and technology.
    • Frequency and time: weekly, every Tuesday, 12:00 noon SLT
    • Location: Simon Linden’s place, Denby.
    • Format: text (local chat)
  • Sill Gaming:
    • Purpose: to discuss anything pertaining to the Skill Gaming Programme. How to be part of the SLSG Programme, questions about processes, and any known issues or concerns.
    • Frequency and time: generally, the 2nd Tuesday of the month, 11:00 SLT.
    • Location: Gaming Island.
    • Format: text / Voice.
  • Content Creation User Group:
    • Purpose: to discuss of SL content creation.
    • Frequency and time: generally, alternate Thursdays, 13:00 SLT.
    • Location: Hippotropolis Camp Site.
    • Format: Text / Voice.
  • Open Source Development:
    • Purpose: to discuss SL development, including open source contributions.
    • Frequency and time:  every 4th Wednesday, 07:00 SLT.
    • Location: Hippotropolis Camp Site.
    • Format: text.
  • Land and Support:
    • Purpose: discussion of topics related to land and Mainland issues.
    • Frequency and time: every 4th Wednesday, 12:00 noon SLT.
    • Location: Linden Estate Services.
    • Format: text / Voice
  • Web User Group:
    • Purpose: discussion of Web properties such as Marketplace, Profiles, Place Pages, Search, etc.
    • Frequency and time: generally every first Wednesday of the month, 14:00 SLT.
    • Location: Alexa Linden’s Barn.
    • Format: text / Voice.

To keep abreast of all meeting, please refer to the SL public calendar:

 

As a reminder, I attempt to provide summaries of as many meetings as I can attend, and Pantera Północy provide videos of the meeting she attends on her You Tube channel.

 

2025 SL viewer release summaries week #4

Logos representative only and should not be seen as an endorsement / preference / recommendation

Updates from the week through to Sunday, January 26th, 2025

This summary is generally published every Monday, and is a list of SL viewer / client releases (official and TPV) made during the previous week. When reading it, please note:

  • It is based on my Current Viewer Releases Page, a list of all Second Life viewers and clients that are in popular use (and of which I am aware), and which are recognised as adhering to the TPV Policy. This page includes comprehensive links to download pages, blog notes, release notes, etc., as well as links to any / all reviews of specific viewers / clients made within this blog.
  • By its nature, this summary presented here will always be in arrears, please refer to the Current Viewer Release Page for more up-to-date information.
  • Note that for purposes of length, TPV test viewers, preview / beta viewers / nightly builds are generally not recorded in these summaries.

Official LL Viewers

  • Release viewer: version 7.1.11.12363455226. formerly the ExtraFPS RC, dated December 17, promoted December 19 – No change.
  • Release Candidate: Forever FPS, version 7.1.12.12935708795, January 24, 2025.
    • Numerous crash and performance fixes.

LL Viewer Resources

Third-party Viewers

V7-style

  • Alchemy – 7.1.9.2516 (Beta WebRTC build) January 20, 2025 – release notes.

V1-style

  • Cool VL Viewer Stable: 1.32.2.32, January 25, 2025 – release notes.

Mobile / Other Clients

  • No updates.

Additional TPV Resources

Related Links

A Drone Haven in Second Life

Drone Haven, January 2025 – click any image for full size

Drone Haven is a full region under group holding – led by Cate Infinity – and designed and built by Myrdin Sommer, who invited me over to have a look around just ahead of the region’s official opening on January 25th, 2025.

The setting presents as what might be regarded as a post-apocalyptic environment: a city being reclaimed by nature, humankind’s time having passed – but life of various forms has not entirely deserted it, and the streets and building are not entirely deserted.

Drone Haven, January 2025

In this, perhaps the best way to describe the setting is to use Cate’s own words:

Drone Haven, a long-abandoned city, stands as a haunting reminder of humanity’s fleeting importance, where rusted skyscrapers and overgrown ruins bear witness to nature’s quiet reclamation. Amidst the decay, drones roam like spectral caretakers, performing their programmed rituals of planting flora, symbolizing the paradox of human ambition and nature’s enduring dominance. This poignant landscape reflects the fragile balance of resilience and collapse, a testament to the inevitability of energy’s finite cycle and the enduring power of nature.

– Drone Haven description

Drone Haven, January 2025

To say this is a region packed to gills would be an understatement; there really is a lot to see, indoors and out. This being the case, I would perhaps suggest using a moderate draw distance to help ease the amount of data being sent to the viewer from the CDN at any given time; also, given the general design of the region, a high draw distance really isn’t required.

An example of the content awaiting discovery can be seen within the motel. Overlooked by the local elevated railway, this is a place where every room is furnished and has a story to tell – including hints to suggest not all the humans have necessarily departed the city.

Drone Haven, January 2025

Exploration of the setting can be done in a number of ways: on foot or following the various roads or by hopping on one of the tour bot cars, or by using the street signs which function as teleport boards allowing you to hop directly to places like the motel, the church, the bot shop (Futura Bots), the events area, and so on.

Another aspect of the setting is the degree of integration between the audio stream (when events are not in session) and the setting; the music within the audio streams is highly atmospheric and fits the environment perfectly – and I understand from Cate that it  includes quirky “ads” inspired bey the setting’s billboards – although I admit I did not hear any during my visit.  Also awaiting discovery are the many places to sit and pose / interactive elements (such as the animation booths).

Drone Haven, January 2025

The drones mentioned in the region’s description are to be found throughout the city, with several models available for purchase at Futura Bots, for those so inclined. Going about their business along the streets and at various places of business, the drones are one of the two most numerous populations within the city – the other being the local cats.

As well as the motel showing possible signs of continued human habitation, other signs that humans are may not be entirely absent from the city. Just take the survivalist camp, for example, complete with a dormitory taking the form of a remnants of a submarine.

Drone Haven, January 2025

To mark the region’s opening, Drone Haven / The Refuge team will be playing host to a 12-hour music festival commencing at 11:00 SLT on Saturday, January 25th, with 1-hour DJ sets running every hour through until 23:00 SLT, and all are welcome.  The dress code for the event is given as  Apocalyptic / Robotic / Futuristic / Survivalist.

Richly set and with the promise of future music events after the opening, Drone Haven is a captivating, visually engaging and photogenic – and I thoroughly recommend a visit.

Drone Haven, January 2025

SLurl Details

A Dawn of Lights in Second Life

l’Oree des lumieres, January 2025 – click any image for full size

l’Oree des lumieres (Dawn of Lights) occupies half of a Full Adult region leveraging the additional Land Capacity allowance, and was recently featured in the Destination Guide.

Design by Lisa Rose (lisabellia), it is a French-focused region offering a rich mix of themes, music and whimsy – a place which should be seen using its Shared Environment and with local sounds enabled (both essential for capturing the full ambience of the setting).

l’Oree des lumieres, January 2025
Dawn of Lights: the destination of all your dreams. Come and discover this magical place where all dreams are allowed, relax and have a good time with each other.

– l’Oree des lumieres Destination Guide entry

With an east-to-west orientation, the setting features its main Landing Point (not enforced) to the west, sitting on a small island it shares with the ruins of a small abbey. From here, the route of exploration is marked by a number of trails passing across the landscape, making find your way around a matter of following each of them and seeing where they might lead.

l’Oree des lumieres, January 2025

As well as offering routes of exploration, these paths also break the setting up into a number of vignette-like areas, each with its own notable elements, separated from the rest by the paths and yet flowing together as a whole. The largest of these is the large pond sitting towards the east end of the setting, around which one of the tracks loops, and where the gardens are rich in colour and light.

On the north side of this pond is a glass palace; a place which, going by the menus at the tables there, might well be suited to wedding lunches, the large swallows within it notwithstanding.  In this, the swallows are not the only animals and creatures to be found here, the setting being the home to a number of fae folk throughout as well as winged horses, centaurs, mermaids, giant butterflies – most of these are living, while others are celebrated in sculpture.

l’Oree des lumieres, January 2025

Beyond the pond and tucked behind a rocky wall cut through with a single entrance hole, sits a fairy garden and village cloaked by the spring boughs of the trees overhead, and above which a flying whale slowly circles and upon which visitors might sit. It is somewhat mirrored to the west by another garden rich in colour and flowers.

Throughout the setting are numerous places to sit and pass the time – and here again is where I strongly recommend having local sounds enabled, as the music here really is a part of the entire environment, offered through various objects found within the various vignettes.  There are other little secrets to be found – the wizard’s hideaway, the tunnel winding through the hills.

l’Oree des lumieres, January 2025

A further secret lies in the skies, although the way up to it is relatively easy to find as is lies between the glass palace and the pond. It takes the form of a teleport disc and sitting on it will lift you up to the local night club. Futuristic in form, yet carrying echoes of the more spiritual elements of the ground-level setting, the club is warm in look and tones. I’m not sure as to any events schedule for 2025, but I assume notices of any being held are publicised through the setting’s free-to-join Group.

As with so many settings of this kin in SL, there is much that could be written about l’Oree des lumieres, but really – and genuinely – the best way to appreciate it is not through words or pictures, but in visiting and experiencing it.

l’Oree des lumieres, January 2025

SLurl Details

l’Oree des lumieres (Silver Island, rated Adult)

Selen’s Captive Lights in Second Life

HeArt and Soul Gallery: Selen Minotaur – Captive Lights

Currently open at the HeArt and Soul Gallery operated by Tom Willis and Lizzy Swordthain through the rest of January 2025 and into February, is Captive Lights, an exhibition by Selen Minotaur mixing (predominantly) 2D pieces with 3D sculptures. It is presented as being inspired by the works of James Turrell, and stands as both a unique homage to his work as well as reflecting Selen’s own sensibilities in the use of colour, geometry, and light to offer visual journeys and narratives.

The exhibition is the first at HeArt and Soul following the gallery’s update to utilise PBR materials. I’m not sure if Blinn-Phong (“legacy”) materials are provided as fallback. As such, I would recommend the use of a PBR-capable viewer when visiting (and note that some of the art elements within the exhibition are also PBR), together with the use of the Shared Environment.

HeArt and Soul Gallery: Selen Minotaur – Captive Lights

Born in 1946, James Turrell is often referred to as “the master of light” for his work in combining natural light with artificial colour to create dynamic environments in which the sense of light and perception of colour shifts both naturally and as the visitor moves through them. In this, he is regarded as one of the principal torch-bearers of the Light and Space art movement, an initially loose affiliation of artists working with light, volume and scale (and which touches upon genres such as minimalism, optical art and geometric abstraction), which started in the 1960s and perhaps became more formalised in the 1970s.

Turrell’s own approach to his art is born of a mix of influences: his parents were both Quakers, with his mother defining their faith in terms of a simple decree: that each of us can experience an inner light of understanding of the the world (and by extension, the cosmos) around us. His father was an aeronautical engineer and pilot, from whom Turrell gained a love of flying (qualifying as a pilot himself at the age of 16) and a fascination with celestial phenomena. These influences led him to a degree in perceptual psychology prior to switching to art, and working on his earliest installations utilising light and volume.

HeArt and Soul Gallery: Selen Minotaur – Captive Lights

Today, Turrell is perhaps most famous for his Skyspace installations, which have been established in more than 75 locations world-wide, and most particularly for his Roden Crater installation. The latter is a 45-year project Turrell, with the support of various art institutions and universities, has been developing within the 4.8 km wide cinder cone of an extinct volcano near flagstaff, Arizona, and regarded as the pinnacle of his research into  human visual and psychological perception.

With Captive Lights, Selen presents a series of 2D pieces which reflect many of the core elements found within Turrell’s art and the wider Light and Space movement. There are pieces mindful of his Sky Space installations and the Alpha Tunnel at Roden Crater (Palace Corridor, for example). Similarly, Magic Cubes might be taken as a modern take on Turrell’s 1966 work, Afrum-Proto, whilst pieces such as The Wall Eye might bring to mind elements found within Turrell’s Passages of Light retrospective.

HeArt and Soul Gallery: Selen Minotaur – Captive Lights

At the same time, the pieces in the collection are very much born of Selen’s own signature embodiment of abstraction, light, colour, and minimalism, and her ability to tug at the threads of our imagination and comprehension and offer hints of potential narrative or greater perception.

The images in this exhibition are intended to be minimalist, with light as the main heroine, even if characters sometimes appear. The light is framed or staged to capture an energy or a specific moment. The chosen title, deliberately loaded with mystery and symbolism, invites the viewer to connect their perceptions to their imagination, to their emotions, to build their own stories or representations.

– Selen Minotaur on Captive Light

HeArt and Soul Gallery: Selen Minotaur – Captive Lights

A thoroughly engaging exhibition to tickle the mind – and, for those unfamiliar with either Turrell’s work and / or the Light and Space art movement, an open invitation to explore both.

SLurl Details

2025 week #4: SL SUG meeting summary

Sweet Surrender, November 2024 – blog post

The following notes were taken from the Tuesday,  January 21st, 2025 Simulator User Group (SUG) meeting. They form a summary of the items discussed, and are not intended to be a full transcript, and were taken from Pantera’s video of the meeting, which is embedded at the end – my thanks to her for providing it.

Meeting Overview

  • The Simulator User Group (also referred to by its older name of Server User Group) exists to provide an opportunity for discussion about simulator technology, bugs, and feature ideas.
  • These meetings are conducted (as a rule):
  • Meetings are open to anyone with a concern / interest in the above topics, and form one of a series of regular / semi-regular User Group meetings conducted by Linden Lab.
  • Dates and times of all current meetings can be found on the Second Life Public Calendar, and descriptions of meetings are defined on the SL wiki.

Simulator Deployments

  • On Tuesday, January 21st, 2025, the simulators on the Main SLS channel were restarted with no update.
  • On Wednesday, January 22nd, 2025 the RC channels will be restarted.
  • Banana Bread, the next simulator update will be likely be deployed to Aditi for testing.

SL Viewer Updates

  • Default viewer: version 7.1.11.12363455226, formerly the ExtraFPS RC (multiple performance fixes, aesthetic improvements and UI optimisations), dated December 17, promoted December 20 – No Change.
  • Release Candidate: Forever FPS, version 7.1.12.12793544240, January 17, 2025.
    • Numerous crash and performance fixes.

In Brief

Please refer to the video below for the following:

  • Leviathan Linden is due to resume work on the problem where content doesn’t always show up on first login/teleport arrival after being asked to look into a couple of other issues. His initial investigations have indicated that the problem is most likely simulator-side, be he’s still digging into the exact cause.
  • 2K Bakes on Mesh:
    • Pepper Linden confirmed the simulator updates have been approved by QA.
    • Pepper also confirmed the viewer update is related to a problem found within the texture pipeline of ExtraFPS using too much VRAM (see this Canny issue report). This fix is due to go into the Lab’s ForeverFPS viewer update, and LL would like Firestorm to include it in a release before switching on 2K BoM.
  • There is some confusion as to the status of the glTF scene import project in the wake of Runitai Linden’s departure from LL.
    • Runitai got as far as prototyping the capability on Aditi, but it was not tied into the physical engine.
    • As has been mentioned numerous times, the majority of the focus within the graphics / viewer teams has been on improving overall viewer performance and is currently geared towards assisting Firestorm deal with blocker to their ExtraFPS release.
  • The above led to a discussion on the value of including some form of 3D mesh editing tool in the viewer. Unsurprisingly. These discussions saw a range of viewpoints expressed.
  • Leviathan Linden intimated that the viewer-side work for his game controller updates (which are available server-side) is also pending on resources within the viewer team becoming available in order to make the game control options more easily accessible (e.g. with the official viewer, it has to be unlocked via the Advanced menu).
  • A discussion on properly-supported “walking / running backwards” animations states.
  • It was suggested that the server-side Luau work (scripting) could be deployed to Aditi “in the next few months (possibly)” to allow scripters to poke at it while it is still in development.
  • Requests for additions to the official viewer, including RLV (RLV/a has been contributed by Kitty Barnett for inclusion in the official viewer, but the status of the work in doing so is unclear – it’s a significant piece of work).
  • A reminder that Monty Linden is working to correct defects within EventQueueGet (a simulator Capability that delivers messages from a simulator to viewers over HTTP using a long-poll scheme. It is core functionality without which viewer/simulator coordination is impossible), and is seeking feedback  – see here for both defects, proposals to resolve and how to test.

† The header images included in these summaries are not intended to represent anything discussed at the meetings; they are simply here to avoid a repeated image of a rooftop of people every week. They are taken from my list of region visits, with a link to the post for those interested.