Tuesday, October 11, 2011

Ask me about missing a whole month.

Been really busy in my RL. (Real Life for those who don't speak SL-ese.  Which oddly enough spells a word very like sleaze... ) So I haven't done much in SL other than show up, and play around, when I have any time at all.

Anyway, I don't know exactly what to blog about, haven't really been to any place new and taken snapshots lately, etc.  Did find a new shop that has some nice inexpensive stuffs, but I need to landmark it and all that, and I haven't gotten around to that.

So I think I shall instead comment on what I think is possibly the most annoying thing anyone can put in their profile.

"Ask me."

I HATE that.  No, I am not going to ask you.  I am going to ignore you, making the assumption I don't just mute you in a fit of pique.  Why do I hate it?

As you might surmise from my comment above, I don't have unlimited time to to spend in SL.  So, should I be in the mood to chat, does it seem like a worthy use of that limited time, to stop and ask 20 questions to everyone around me?  Pardon me, do you like Firefly?  Excuse me, what do you think about the latest developments in quantum physics?  Do you like to be tickled?  Etc. etc.

Or does it seem more constructive to do a quick scan of folks and read their profiles. Profiles in which they list a few random thoughts about themselves.  That combined with any visible groups, will give me some idea of why you are in SL, and if we might have something in common.

And then there is that awkward moment when you first IM someone.  Yes, you can IM "Hello."  And...

If you read something interesting or amusing in their profile, you can IM them something like, "Hello.  I see you like to shop at SFD, she makes great formal wear doesn't she?"  Or, "Hi, I see from your profile that you really like <*insert song/group/poet/writer here*>, have you ever..."  Etc.  I personally tend to respond much more agreeably to IMs that have some content besides, "Hello."  To which I usually respond "Hello?"  While I read your profile.  And if it says "Ask me" I start yanking your chain.  I can be an asshole too it seems.

Blank is better than "Ask me."  Ask me is the passive aggressive asshole way of having a blank profile.  You are not brave enough to have a blank one and loudly proclaim, "I'm boring and/or I don't give a rat's ass about attracting any like minded person's attention."  Instead, you say, "Ask me." So you can say, "Hey, at least *I* didn't leave it blank."

So sit on it and spin all you flipping gutless boring "ask me" people!

Sunday, August 14, 2011

The bits shall lead the way...

Okay, I do visit a fair number of adult places in SL.  And I've been known to be rather naughty in some of them.  While being naughty I happened to see a new product from Sensations that belongs to a friend named Keillie.  Sensations is the maker of many fine adult products.  (And for those of you might want to know, I usually wear a [17] so this is not a product endorsement.)

Anyway, I went to thier main shop to see what had changed since the last time I checked it out.  If you're old enough, it is worth a visit.  For several reasons.  One is...This is under the shop.





See it pays to explore beyond the walls, you find the most interesting things.  In fact, after finding this place I explored still further.  And next door to the Sensations main shop is a moderate (as in non-adult) free form, open to all, Fairy Role Playing Sim.  It is called  Fairy's Grove Creations & Glimmer Fairytale Fantasy Roleplay @ Aurora (61, 240, 21).  The build looks like it has great atmosphere for elf RP.  So I put on my elf look and spent some time exploring.  Here are some snapshots from around the sim. 



 I love the way you find things just sort of laying around in SL that make you go ...Wow.  You should check out this place!  These are only some of the great locations.





Sunday, August 7, 2011

Boots & Bots

It all started with someone telling me about some really nice combat boots for 10L.  So I go pick them up and yep, they are da bomb.  They come in all colors, but only the green ones are 10L.  The others are a whole 50L.  Might go back and get more.  Well, with new boots, I needed a showcase outfit.  And here is what I came up with.  I liked it so much I put it in my profile.  Doesn't the outfit just scream B movie poster for a really poorly done action film staring a former centerfold, or something similar?



Boots are from b[ELLE]issima! @ MonkeyLick Island (212, 49, 22).  Jacket is a moded Rocker Lady from Bare@Rose.  Sunglasses and top are from Grumble, and pants are from Caminal.

In the process of the making the snapshot I used in my profile, I ended up going to an adult sim called Skara Brae.  It's under going a remodel, but here are some snapshots of some of the sim areas.  You should swing by, if you are old enough, and look around.  If you are into science fiction themed role playing this is a great place.  And the bar almost always has some folks to chat with.  The snapshot below was a rare moment when there were just two of us.  A few minutes later there were six.
Above is the bar at Skara Brae, below are some snapshots from around the extensive med lab area.


 Below is the shooting range at Skara Brae.  I go there sometimes and blow stuff up for fun. 
 And last but not least a more natural setting, guns at the ready.  Taken at my frequent hang out Pair-A-Dice.
"Ahem...Awl be beck."

Saturday, July 23, 2011

While visiting Yadni's...

Every once in a while I visit Yadni's junkyard, an old freebie sim that's still around.  I popped in today and looked around, but then I decided to go look over the walls and see what was around.  I was surprised to see a huge Greek Temple on a nearby hill top.  I wandered over to check it out.  It's pretty nice.  I think it was, or is intended to eventually be, a furniture store.  But for now, it's just a big cool, mostly empty building.  Below are some snapshots. I'm sporting an outfit of separates, mostly from Baby Monkey.  She makes some interesting prim skirts and things, as well as about a gazzilion shoes.  You can find location below at Lauren at the Landing Fine Furniture, Epimetheus (115, 97, 89).

Wednesday, July 20, 2011

Grumbling

One place I've been shopping a lot lately is called Grumble.  Found at Grumble, Club Chrome, Mall & House Rentals, GRUMBLE (99, 165, 23).  The place is like Target on steroids.  And they have awesome midnight mania boards with gift certificates into the 1000s of linden.  Given the average outfit runs under 200L with shoes, you can go on a serious shopping spree.  Pictured below are a couple of outfits featuring seperates from Grumble.  This is only a tiny sampler.  Formals, cocktail dresses, mens wear, a whole Neko section, pets, beach wear, shoes, furniture, etc. etc. etc.  You should check it out.

Feeling a bit elvish are we?

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Been too long!

It has been a very long time since I've updated by blog.  My RL has interfered with my SL and the inclination to post here.  I've had an opertunity to be online more lately and so I'm going to post a couple of things and hopefully get back into the swing of things.  To get things rolling a couple of call backs to places I've mentioned before Little Kasiopaya.  Another neat image from there, this one of me meditating among the nebula.  I'm wearing my Gogo Yubari like school girl outfit from Bare@Rose.  If you aren't familiar with Bare@Rose and you've been in SL for more than 3 months, you must not be living right.  The place is gimongus!  Mostly anime inspired outfits at very reasonable prices.  Stop, do not pass go.  Go to Bare@Rose HQ and hit the big freebie pile, then look around.

The other place is Pair A Dice.  The owner has been putting out a lot of new fun things to do.  And I've set up a mini-scavenger hunt.  The outfits you can find are shown below.


Most of these outfits incorporate items from other full perm outfits.  Not only is the outfit shown included, but all of the perm outfit(s) that went into it in their original packaging by the original creator.  So talk about the swag!  The hunt starts at the sign near the stern of the 100 meter long modern yacht that Pair A Dice has instead of a tall ship.  Come on by and pick them up.

Update: 2/2012 - The sim owner has changed a lot of things around the place and the mini-hunt for the above outfits is gone.  If you want one/all of these, IM me in world and I'll send you a copy.

Update 4/2012 - The sim owner wanted to put out some goodies again, so there is a huge treasure chest near the docks at Pair A  Dice with all of these boxed outfits and more in it.  Click on the chest to get some free swag.

Tuesday, May 3, 2011

CHEEEEEESE CAKE!

I like cheese cake, all kinds of cheese cake.  It's one of my favorite things.  So today, the kind that doesn't' require cooking.

I happened to receive an IM from someone about maybe posing for them.  And then went to Monique's, a shop that has a lot of cute outfits in my style.  The shop is Monique's Fashion @ Snipe (136, 31, 27).  She usually sells the entire outfit, shoes and all, for under 200L!  The shop has a men's section, and an area of silks if you like that sort of thing.

I ended up buying a white babydoll, and decided to take a cute snapshot wearing it.  So without further ado, here it is.

Saturday, April 30, 2011

Dance your sock off!

One of my favorite things to do in SL is find a club playing the kind of music I like, and dance my avatar along with the tunes.  It's amazing to me that with a small selection of dances, you can usually find one that matches fairly well to the music being streamed.

The big issue is finding music you like.  For dancing, I admit I like classic rock.  There is a lot of music I like, but something about the music of the 60s, 70s and 80s just works for dancing and listening together.  Maybe it's that disco thing?  Who knows?  Anyway, one of my favorite places to go lately has been Lars.  It's adult, so things can get a bit ...wild...At times.  And really caters more to the hetero-only crowd.  But they are generally friendly and welcoming to all sorts of folks.


The DJs at Lar's are often quite good, one of my favorites is Jack Mack.  That's him in the loose tie and stately white beard and hair.  I stopped by the other night to show off my new outfit from Swaffette Firefly and enjoy some tunes.  The place was, as usual, hopping.



Here's a close up of the outfit.  It also comes with pants that have flexi-prim cuffs, and in 3 other colors.  It's a steal for 200L!  Boots are from Grumble, and I tinted them to match the outfit better.

Monday, April 25, 2011

Easter with Seek

I was having kind of a blah day, it has been rainy and stormy all weekend where I live in RL.  When I logged into SL, a friend of mine ended up coming by to show me her Easter outfit.  Which was adorable.  So I got all dressed up too, which is always fun.  Then we had a fine time dancing, exploring and shopping till I had to log off.  Thanks Seek!

Seek and I Dancing at Pair-A-Dice

After dancing a bit, we decided to tour Paris in SL.  It is one of the best done "Real Life Simulations" I've seen in SL.  You should swing by and check it out.


 Here's a view from a lower deck on the Mr. Eiffel's famous tower.


This is not an adult sim, so be sure you dress appropriately.  And if you ride the Ferris-wheel, be sure to wear undies!  It gets windy up there!


Since it was Easter, we had to visit Notre' Dame.  Quite lovely don't you think?

Sunday, April 17, 2011

One of my favorite shops!

To get back to showing you the wonders of Second Life without editorializing, let me tell you about Swaffette Firefly.  Her SF designs shop is one of my favorites in SL.  She makes the best formal wear I've seen in SL.  Some are more expensive, some are more "prim-ish."  But none are really any more elegant than hers.  She is the creator of the outfit I chose for my profile snapshot at the time of this blog's creation, and for the 1000 avatar project.  Below I'm shown having a Rat Pack moment in her free tux.



She puts out a new freebie every month to boot!

You can visit her shops called SF Designs at High Society - formal wear from , Penryn (69, 81, 36).

Eyes on the Multitude

My previous post was on the wonder of diversity.  It was inspired by thoughts about the so called "Thousand Avatar Project."  created by Gracie Kendal aka Kristine Schomaker.  You can visit her gallery of avatar images in world.  Hundreds, no literally thousands, of images of avatars facing away from you.  An image evocative of the anonymous nature of Second Life.  But also, show casing the vast array of choices people have made in how to present themselves.  You can read more about it at http://1000avatars.wordpress.com/about/.


As you can see from the snapshot here, all sorts of avatars are shown.  I have spent quite a while here just looking at them, wondering why someone chose this or that appearance.  Surprised at the recurring themes...You really should check this out!

Infinite Delight in Infinite Creation

Okay, time to get my Geek on.  Then I'm going to get deep and maybe a little preachy.  Hopefully I'll do so in a mildly amusing way.

Way back during the filming of the original Star Trek series, a Vulcan philosophy called IDIC was inserted into the series.  I've read it was done mostly as a marketing gimmick.  Regardless of why it exists, I was exposed to it as a young boy and the concept spoke to me.  "Infinite Diversity in Infinite Combinations."  Being who I am, I turned that over in my head and rubbed it against other concepts in my life, and after twisting it around to suit me, made it part of my own personal philosophy. 

Frankly I think a lot of who I am comes from reading and watching Science Fiction.  For example, my sense of personal responsibility?  I'll give that to Heinlein, mostly from Starship Troopers, the book.  Which despite the awful movie, really isn't about being a testosterone poisoned idiot and killing giant bugs while driving space ships way too close together.  

As it happened, this IDIC idea rubbed against something one of my teachers told me as a child.  She was a young lady with a child only slightly younger than myself and her other students.  One day she told us a cautionary tale about failing to see the wonder in the world as we grow up.  Her story, as I remember it, went thusly...

"My daughter and I were walking along the side walk yesterday, and I stepped over a weed growing in a crack.  After a few steps I noticed my daughter had stopped and was looking at the weed.  She said, "Isn't the flower pretty mama?"  She didn't just look at the weed, she saw the weed, and that there was indeed a beautiful flower growing from it.  You should hold onto that ability to see the wonder around you as long as you can.  That is something that is hard for adults to do."

I have worked hard since that time long ago to do that.  And it is.  Keeping a "child like" sense of wonder, while behaving like an adult is not always an easy or simple thing.  It definitely get's me "looks". 

For example, the other day I was standing in front of row of server enclosures and just stopped to consider what I was looking at.  Enough storage to contain all the text of all the books ever printed conventionally.  Enough computing power to have solved all of NASA's moon shot problems in a couple of hours.  All that from pocket calculators in my lifetime!  I was literally dumbfounded with wonder.  The person I was with looked at me as said, "Something wrong?"  My reply, "No.  You ever look at this and consider the complexity and wonder of it?  That it all actually WORKS!"  Result:  Look from fellow techie signaling, "You are a weirdo."

Among all that computing power were connections to a literally world spanning network of such machines that has given rise to a whole new concept of being.  Virtualness.  I'll save talking about that can of worms for another post.

While progressive thinkers in the entertainment industry have certainly shaped my thought.  So have words and traditions as old as man.  I had a childhood steeped in the Christian religion.  Not just one sect either.  My parents seemed to be having something of a crisis of faith as I grew up and we went to many different churches over several years.  Among them; Pentecostal, Catholic, Jehovah's Witness,  Baptist,  Evangelical.  I spent much of my teenage years in discussions, some rather quiet and thoughtful, some not so much, with people of other Christian beliefs, as well as Atheists, Jews, Wiccans, even the occasional Buddhist, Hindu and Moslem.

And from these experiences many things coalesced in my personal philosophy.  Two of them tightly bound.  A total lack of trust and support for organized religion, and an abiding respect for the rare true believers.  An envy almost.  I'm not talking about zealots who preach against this, or that.  I am convinced they are either deluded, damaged or hypocritical.  And if I had to make up a list of sins, hypocrisy would be pretty far up on it. 

No the true believers preach FOR things.  Peace.  Understanding.  Love.  They may be saddened, or angered, by the actions and beliefs of others.  But they don't rail against them.  They don't blow them up.  They pray for them.  Or they try to demonstrate by how they live and act, that their way is the right way.  Those people have the power to save a soul if anyone does. 

When I looked at how all this worked, it seemed to me that the only workable basis for me to look at life, was to try and see the wonder of creation.  If god exists, his message to us is in that creation.  And one of the most important parts of that creation to us humans, is us humans.

Stop.  Take a breath.  Put aside as much as you can of any personal preferences, beliefs, bias, etc.  Think about it, what ONE thing is constant in all of creation?

Diversity

Infinite variations on a theme.  Regardless of how it came to be.  Created by God in seven days, or evolved from the big bang in 14 billion years...Infinite variation.  In energy and matter.  In animal species.  In us.

So, to use the modern vernacular, don't hate.  Look around.  Take delight in the variations.  Stop and enjoy the beauty of a weed growing up through the sidewalk.  Look at your fellow man and his, her or hir peculiar notions and wonder that the same sort of being as yourself has come up with something so radically different from what you might have produced.

Do you need to embrace it?  No.  Just pause, consider, and enjoy the sight of the pretty flower in an unexpected place. My recommendation, take delight in the infinite diversity of creation.

Thursday, March 24, 2011

It Is Not A Game

If you are a Second Life resident, you probably know about everything I’m going to rant about below.  You can keep reading and maybe be amused, or offended, at my take on things.  If you are not familiar with Second Life, then you might find something useful below.  First thing you might learn, I’ll often refer to Second Life as SL. .Most residents do that.I have been reading up on Second Life again, and well, to put it frankly, I'm more than a bit annoyed.  I became aware of second life around 2006.  I work in the tech field and began to see articles about this strange new game that seemed to center around buying and selling land.  Having never had the urge to be a realtor, I certainly felt no desire to play a game where I pretended to deal in real estate.  And that was the extent of my understanding of SL thanks to our fine journalistic tradition of free and often incomplete and/or inaccurate information.

You see as a whole, I mostly don't like computer games.  I find them too limiting.  I can only solve a problem the way a programmer wanted me to do so.  I see no point in pretending to kill things over and over.  I have no problem with "pretend" violence in video games or movies.  Most of my favorite movies have a significant body count.  But the idea of killing and killing, only so that I can get better stuff to kill still more things so I can get better stuff to kill more things.  Well, to me it gets boring very quickly. 

Now you are thinking, well "you just don't like games."  There you are wrong.  I have been playing, on and off, table top RPGs and war games since I was in high school.  Now you say, but that's the same!  To me it is not.  In a small group of friends playing an RPG there are specific personal reasons for your character to do things.  At least in a good one.  Things would not be the same if you suddenly replaced Zorka the Tasmanian Berserker with Shippley the sneaky thief with a heart of gold.  For the most part, they would be, in a computer game.

So why am I annoyed?  Because I have yet to see a single posting or article by anyone who is not a regular visitor to Second Life, who “got it.”  Due to that, I didn’t try Second Life until after I saw it featured on a rerun of CSI: New York.  This also happened to be a time in my life when I was laid up with an injury so I was finding it difficult to enjoy my “1st life” in all the ways I might normally do so.  After seeing that episode of what is not anywhere near my favorite show, I hit Google and found sites that had postings by Second Life residents.  The idea I could build my own content intrigued me, and I finally down loaded the client and tried it.

I was quickly blown away.  I loved it.  I was hooked my first visit.  It wasn’t a game.  It wasn’t a chat client.  It’s not a social networking site.  It’s not anything.  It’s everything.  It’s a virtual world.  It’s a tool kit to make your own virtual “life” whatever you want it to be.

Notice I said “make.”  Not be lead around by the nose till you are umtieth level and can kill anything you want with a flick of your very own epic uber super electro vorpal sword of vengeance.  In fact, if I felt like having a epic uber super electro vorpal sword of vengeance in SL, in the time it takes you to hunt down and kill the necessary 100,000 critters in a multiplayer game  I can learn the skills to make my own.  Then use those same skills to make all sorts of things.  I can keep them to myself, or give them away, or even see if anyone will buy them.  Then I can do this neat thing where I exchange my time and skills for products made by other people with different skills.  Very shortly I have all the epic stuff I never wanted.  And maybe some nice shoes. If you like running around pretending to kill things, then go on! Do it! Have fun, but it is not my thing.

Many reviewers say that they get into Second life and:
  1. I couldn’t find anyone as I aimlessly explored.
  2. I had trouble finding anything interesting to do.  (Other than weird sex stuff.)
  3. I find the interface clunky.  Especially when you are trying to kill things.
  4. I don’t have the time to learn the skills to make things.  After all, there are already a world full of things already made, why make more?
Let me address each of these in turn:

#1  I couldn’t find anyone as I aimlessly explored:  

This is often accompanied with comments on how lost they felt and how lonely it was.  They can’t imagine why anyone would enjoy this.  Or, if they do stumble upon a gathering, they seem offended, as though there is some secret Second Life Masonic Lodge and since they were not members they weren’t getting invited to the fun.

Second Life’s land area is tremendous.  And despite what Linden Labs claims about user numbers, I rarely see figures much beyond 50,000 concurrent users...Second Life sprawls.  Things are big and spread out in some ways, and sometimes strangely compact.  I think this stems from the fact that the owner of a shop selling shoes can be paying the same amount per square foot as the owner of a huge empty woodland park.  Again, this comes down to “what you make of it.”  That land used wasn’t either a shoe store, or a forest.  The owner, or someone they hired, had to build what is now there.  Building a forest sounds odd doesn’t it?  This is counter intuitive to those of us who are newly come from dealing only with non-virtual real estate.  In our physical world, development is costly and things that attract people tend to congregate.  If you just randomly plonked down on Earth from space, odds are you’d end up a long way from anyone.  There are ways to get around that, mostly with your enhanced “super” senses.  In Second Life you have a built in GPS and Satellite spy camera.  You can find clusters of people from “space.”  Then using another super power, you can teleport directly to them.  Or if you want, fly, walk, run, sail, crawl, bike, drive, etc.

As to the Masonic group.  Well essentially yes, though not secret.  Second Life Residents tend to form fluid little communities and interest groups.  Centered around activities of common interest.  The thing is, the vast majority (like 99%) of these groups welcome all comers.  All kindred souls and even fellow travelers are given access to the groups events and notices.

#2  I had trouble finding anything interesting to do.  (Other than weird sex stuff.):  

I always feel like emailing back, “What did you stand there and wait for the dialog box from the quest giver to pop up and say something like, “The plague of pink toads has devastated your crop of smurt berries.  Go to the High Pooba in the Temple of Umpla Lumpla, and seek guidance on how to turn the toads into fertilizer.”  Once there of course you would be told to take your butter knife of smiting, the only weapon you own, and go kill all the woogles up the valley because they have a magic toad killing hammer.

Or not…

I’ll take the “Or not.”  What if I just want to look around.  See the cool builds and neat scenery.  Listen to music.  Chat with people in clubs while I listen to said music and have my avatar dance its digital ass off.  Or go find some gosh darn woogles and mow them down with my Uzi, then go find some pink toads and teach them the meaning of high explosive?  Can you say, “C4.”

In short, you have to decide on your own what to do.  Then find it.  Sometimes it’s easy, sometimes it’s hard.  Think of it as a quest from your own internal quest giver.

As to the sex part.  Sure. Recently, about the time I got involved, Linden Labs forced all the “Adult” content providers to move to a new continent called Zindra, within the already “Adult” grid.  I hate to tell you this, but adults are interested in sex.  Maybe even more than shoes or music.  I know I am, shoes and music are for the times in between sex.  

This doesn’t mean I spend all my time on Zindra doing the wild thing.  It just means when I’m in Zindra, or on a privately owned Adult island, I let it all hang out and have that kind of fun.  When I am in a more staid and stogy setting, I do that.  When in Rome as they say.  The way I look at it, more reasons to have different kinds of nice clothes.

Does this make SL sleazy?  Not in my opinion.  It makes it open, honest and tolerant.  People can be and do things here, in company with other like minded adults, that they might be shunned for in their “1st Life.”  Or that might cause serious negative repercussions to their health, family, social standing or career..  They can do things that they fantasize about but can’t or won’t do in their 1st life.  Some will argue that’s unhealthy and dangerous.  If that’s true, then we better put a stop to all those other video games that promote shooting, killing, stabbing, smiting and other such activities. 

There are lots of things to do by yourself, or with others.  And the search engine provided by Linden Labs does suck, so use the web to find event calendars.  More on that later.

#3  I find the interface clunky. (Especially when you are trying to kill things):  

The interface is clunky.  But you get used to it, and you can tweak it considerably.  There are 3rd party viewers, HUDs and other add-ons that change things.  Most of them free.  Most game controls seem kind of artificial and clunky to me, but then I don’t play video games much.  I would make the assumption that if you spend lots of time in driving games, or shooters, or whatever, that certain conventions have become common.  Well, SL can be any of those, but is not made specifically for it, so you get a compromise interface.  If you really want to change it, do so.  It’s all open source.  

I am not saying it could not be improved.  I tend to use 3rd party viewers, HUDs and other add-ons to help ease doing the things I do the most often.  Which I would guess is why it is a bit clunky to start with.  Since the interface must be capable of being used in nearly any conceivable fashion, any sort of change to improve any one part, may very well negatively impact another part.  All things to all people solutions are never prefect.  But at least in this case, you can seriously individualize things as you learn how.

#4  I don’t have the time to learn the skills to make things.  After all there are already a world full of things already made, why make more?:  

I am not going to sugar coat my reaction to this, but I don’t mean to be disrespectful.  If you feel that way about SL, go play WoW, EQ or one of the many online games.  Or find another virtual world, there are several, perhaps one will better suit you.

To me Second Life is a celebration of creativity and learning.  I like to learn things.  And by being in SL I am learning things that are useful in many ways in SL, and in some cases, beyond SL.  For comparison, once you master the interface of most games, how much do you, as a person actually learn?  Your character in Wow, EQ, etc. will learn new skills and abilities.  But you don’t really do that.  I have learned a tremendous amount about how 3D objects are rendered on a 2D screen.  I’ve learned to make effective 2D textures for 3D surfaces.  I have learned how to make virtual 3D objects.  I’ve learned the basics of CGI animation.  I’ve learned to build things inside SL.  I’ve learned about art, history, other cultures, fashion and even some new sex things I never imagined!  And yes, I’ve learned about a lot of new music from the DJs at various parties and clubs.  

And I guess the last thing about making more, is sharing.  In SL you can share your creatively with the other residents, helping them to explore and enrich their lives.  Hopefully, both of them.

To sum up:
  • SL is not a quest filled RP game. It can be, but it won’t be as slick as the purpose made ones.
  • SL is not a chat client.  But it can be, and one that lets you combine other media pretty seamlessly into a 3D virtual space at the same time.
  • SL is not a social networking site.  But SL is a place where like minded individuals can literally build a community that suits them, and pursue their specific interests in ways superior to Facebook.  But it will never be as good a social networking site as Facebook, because again, it is not purpose made for that.
  • SL is not a cyber sex site, though you can do that.
  • SL is a not a music streaming system, but you can do that.
  • SL is not a <insert word here>, but you can do that.
SL is about possibilities.  About us building a virtual world in parallel to our own that let’s us do things we can not do easily, if at all, in the real physical world.  A world with out limits.  And it’s in it’s infancy.  Compared to what I hope 3D virtual environments can eventually achieve, I would compare SL as we have it today is roughly comparable to AOL as they began to send email out to other services.  Right now Linden is the 800 lb gorilla, I think it will not always be that way.

The camel’s nose of a new large user created virtual realm is in the tent, as soon as I can figure out how, I am intending to get outside and kick his butt in here with us.  Hope you’ll join me in that effort.  I will not be sad when Linden Lab’s Second Life grid is just one of many virtual worlds that I can visit.  But I will always give them a nod for opening that door, however partially and imperfectly, for me.

For final satirical and hopefully humorous effect, below is my review of an unnamed massive multi-player online game.  I spent about an hour messing about in it one night, so like many other folks, I now consider myself fully qualified to render a complete report.

Wow Was Not My Reaction

Their advertisements say 10 million people can’t be wrong.  Ever hear of a place called Nazi Germany? I think that history proves any number of people can be wrong.  I downloaded the client and fired it up.  All pretty simple to do.  You have to set up an account, and if you intend to play for more than a few days you have to give them a credit card or something because there is a significant monthly fee.  It’s around $20 USD.  For that I could upgrade to the deluxe cable and watch ESPN or HBO whenever I wanted.  Seems a lot to ask for yet another game where you waste hours and hours running around killing things.  Just so you can run around in that game killing things better.  And if you switch games, you have to start all over!

Once the client is running you have to setup a character.  You pick a race, pretty much the same old ones.  Though there is an interesting new race that looks kind of like a satyr or demon that is included.  I picked a purple elf.  You only have about half a dozen looks really, and no real choices about starting equipment.  I chose a female look, it was rather racily clad in a ragged form fitting clothes.  You couldn’t chose something more austere, or make your character really ugly.

Once you have your character setup you rez into a forest.  You can’t attack the other elves, I wanted to, they all looked like me.  And I hate showing up someplace having the same look as someone else!  After wandering about a bit, one of them told me I needed to go kill a bunch of boars for some bogus reason.  I wandered around killing boars that seemed to endlessly wonder the same repeating path for a while.  I found it very boring.  So I logged out.  

I really don’t see what all the fuss is about.  The graphics are OK, but nothing spectacular.  There is no freedom in the game.  You have to follow set courses of action to accomplish anything.  And the fashions, horrible!  So, I’m thinking, maybe those ten million people are just tired of cable and not very imaginative.

Why Virtual Sock Puppets?

Second Life, and those I've met there, inspired this blog.  And a whole lot of names I might have used were taken.  Virtual Sock Puppets came to me as a way to describe, in my own less than serious manner, the nature of Second Life. 

When we were little children we would (or at least I, and most of my friends would) put socks over our hands (sock puppets) and use these extensions of ourselves as make believe characters.  They could do, or say, any sort of outrageous thing that came to mind.

In Second Life, many of us will use our avatars much the same way.  We create representations of ourselves to say, do or make things we can't, won't, shouldn't or just aren't ready to do in the real world.  Make believe so to speak.

So, in a way, I'm a virtual sock puppet.  And I'm using this blog to write about other virtual sock puppets and their doings.  Am I trivializing Second Life?  Heck no!  I think SL, and probably other virtual worlds and similar venues, have given thousands, by now maybe millions, of people a way to explore, see, be, do and learn about all manner of things.  I believe that Second Life is in the first wave of a new paradigm, something that is hardly trivial.  And one day, people will look back on its comparatively primitive nature, and next to the technology of that future day, it will seem little better than the paper dolls, or sock puppets, of children.  Till then, we use what we have!

Tuesday, March 22, 2011

Some places I like in SL.

Okay, for my first significant post, I thought I'd cover a handful of my favorite places in Second Life.  One of the things that has kept me entranced with Second Life is the shear creativeness of so many of its residents.  Among the actual art created, as art, there are environments that can only be described as artistic.  Places that are just wonderful to look at, and explore.  Other places are fun because of what, or who, can be found there.  You can only list a handful of such places in your personal picks in Second Life.  So one of the reasons I started this blog was to showcase places I thought merit a visit.  So, to that end...

First, a place owned by a dear friend, but that may be closing due to lack of traffic.  A full adult SIM devoted to fun for all, but with a tongue in cheek transgender pirate theme.  Pair A Dice.  Here is a bird's eye view, and the SIM can be found at http://slurl.com/secondlife/Pair%20A%20Dice/202/78/23.
If you imagine it somehow pirate related, you can probably find it here.  A modern yacht with theatre, bed rooms, VIP lounge, dance floor, etc. etc.  A governor's mansion with hidden cellars, a secret pirate cave, ancient temple, grave yard, stables, yadda yadda.  You can spend quite a long time just exploring this huge place.  And if you are looking at the picture above and a little confused to scale, yes, that yacht is over 100m long!


Then there is Ossus, this is Role Playing parcel on the mainland.  PG and intended for a group of players.  So if you visit, be polite and don't interfere with anyone or anything.  But it is amazingly well done.  It is Star Wars themed, and from my somewhat scanty knowledge of that mythos reasonably accurate.  It can be found at http://slurl.com/secondlife/Brazos/50/138/40.

Last but not least, a place where you can feel like some sort of celestial spirit lost in the virtual cosmos.  Little Kasiopaya has several discrete environments that allow you to literally walk among the stars.  Worth a visit just to look around and enjoy the vista, and a great place to take a close friend for a long romantic walk and maybe a cuddle.  Rated Mature, again, dress appropriately and please be kind to others!  You can find this wonderful place at  http://slurl.com/secondlife/Hot%20Midsummers%20Night/54/127/1151 .

Hope you check out and enjoy at least one of these places.