Australians in Second Life Update – finally a bounce back

Linden Lab have released their metrics through until the end of February 2008. The regular downward trend has been reversed, with 12,245 active Australian Second Life users. That’s an increase from last month’s 10,885 and Australia remains in 11th place in terms of countries with active users.

There’s still a fair climb to exceed previous highs and there’s no guarantee this is now an upward trend but at least the trend in the other direction has ceased for now.

A year ago on The Metaverse Journal

We interviewed one of Australia’s most controversial Second Life residents, LukeConnell Vandeverre, who runs the World Stock Exchange (which has now been out of action for close to three months).

The Watch – virtual worlds in the news

1. Sydney Morning Herald – They’re virtually famous. “Imagine an art gallery where you can not only touch the works on display, you can walk over them, sit on them, even fly through them. Such actions would doubtless send security staff into apoplexy, but in Second Life, the world is your oyster. Today three Australian artists unveil their exhibition Babelswarm in the 3D virtual world of Second Life, an interactive sculpture based on the mythical Tower of Babel. For those who like the old-fashioned gallery experience, there is a “real” show at Lismore Regional Gallery.”

2. PC World – Hackers Increasingly Target Browsers. “Threats against browsers are getting more sophisticated and branching out into such exotic areas as gaming, experts told attendees at the recent RSA Conference 2008. New attacks from games and virtual-world Web sites can deliver bot-like control of browsers to attackers, said Ed Skoudis, a security consultant with Intelguardians, speaking at RSA. All that’s needed is for the infected image of an avatar to appear. “The character walks into view of the screen, and I take over the box,” he said.”

3. Fox Business – The Perfect Night For Spacing Out. “Saturday night is prime time for a party, and all the better if it’s a party celebrating our past and future in outer space. This year, Saturday night is Yuri’s Night, which marks the anniversary of humanity’s first ride into space as well as the space shuttle’s first flight. The executive director of Yuri’s Night, Loretta Hidalgo Whitesides, says the event is particularly aimed at Generation Y, the young adults who will be building the spaceships of the future – and paying most of the bill. So it’s a good time to remember why space exploration is worth having a party over.”

4. Boing Boing – BBtv – Avatar Machine, Marc Owens’ wearable simulator of virtual worlds. “Avatar Machine, by designer Marc Owens, is a wearable device that simulates the experience of third-person gaming environments. By wearing this costume and head-mounted camera with VR goggles, a user can view themselves as a sort of virtual character while moving around and interacting in the real world.”

5. ZDNet – The 3-D Web Goes Thin. “Increasingly, it looks like Weight Watchers has gotten hold of the Semantic Web. Fat is out. Thin is in. And while no one’s counting points, it certainly looks like, thin clients will increasingly play a central roles in attracting organizations to the 3-D web. A number of companies are enabling organizations and users to build their own virtual worlds with little more than a browser, much the way Ning, GoingOn, HiveLive, Flux, Me.com, and BricaBox has done for social networks. These instant-virtual-world companies include Vivaty, Altadyn with 3dxplorer, and to a lesser extent ScreenCaster and VastPark.”

6. Contagious – Habbo’s Global Youth Survey. “To gain an insight into what those elusive teens think and what they spend time doing online, Habbo has conducted its Global Youth Survey, questioning 58,000 teens aged 11-18 over 31 countries, including Europe, US and Latin America.”

7. The University Daily Kansan – Osama is hiding-out in Orgrimmar? “The Bush administration seems to think that Osama Bin Laden is in Pakistan. They are wrong. He is cowering behind the auction house in Orgrimmar. From there he leads a vast terror network stretching from Kalimdor to the Eastern Kingdom and even into Outland. When he and his followers aren’t plotting the downfall of the West they are raiding Molten Core. As ridiculous as all of this sounds, that is what the Intelligence Advanced Research Projects Activity group, a US government funded program, has come to believe.”

8. The Northern Star (Lismore, NSW) – First get a Second Life. “Lismore Regional Gallery is staging Australia’s first exhibition of Second Life art. Second Life is a virtual world where people all over the planet can go online and live part of their life in a computer-generated world which has, among other things, its own economy. The exhibition, call Babelswarm, is an interdisciplinary artwork in Second Life exploring words and art.”

9. Gamasutra – MI6 Creative Keynote: CSI Creator Calls For Games, TV To Converge. “Anthony Zuiker, creator and executive producer of CBS’ massive television franchise CSI, called for “cross-blending storytelling” across multiple media formats including television and games, in his creative keynote at the MI6 Game Marketing event in San Francisco.”

10. Reuters – Virtual world offers bands global stage. “Leo Wolff, a woman who joined the online world of Second Life in 2005, bought a small plot of virtual land with eight other musicians and opened the “Virtual Garage” to showcase and perform their music. Her online character, or avatar, Slim Warrior was the first British musician to perform in the popular virtual world with its own currency and a growing economy. She was also the first to duet online with another artist based as far away as Texas.”

11. TechCrunch – Erepublik Combines MMOG And Social Networking. “Madrid, Spain based startup Erepublik is aiming to make its mark in the online gaming community with a model that combines MMOG and social network. At its core, Erepublik is a massive online multiplayer social strategy that aims to be intricate and accelerated enough “to attract a spectrum of both fanatical and casual gamers.” Players can be politicians, soldiers, entrepreneurs or journalists in different countries, and much of the environment is user generated. The game is still in invite only beta testing, but has 10,000 beta testers from 43 countries currently playing the game. A key pitch of Erupblik is the time required to play the game: 14 minutes a day.”

Hands-free in Second Life

Over the past week there’s been quite a bit of buzz around an initial demonstration of some work being done by Kapor Enterprises (Mitch Kapor is Chairman of Linden Lab’s board). The work is best described by watching the demonstration below but essentially it utilises a 3D camera that reads your body movements and translates those movements to your avatar. Leaning forward starts your avatar walking, leaning right turns your avatar right and so on.

The demonstration:

It’s an impressive evolution for Second Life although far from unique. Whichever application makes true hands-free operation possible without taxing hardware requirements is going to garner a lot of interest. Add to that progress being made by Emotiv in translating thoughts and feelings to avatars and you can see the future roadmap for this technology a little clearer.

Check the Handsfree 3D website for more details.

Weekend Whimsy

1. Invisible Threads

A biting satire of ‘sweatshop’ labour in Second Life

2. Avatar Heroes

Second Life features on The Daily Show with Jon Stewart.

3. Second Life Mexico Ruta Maya

Episode 3 of TMJ Podcast – Wolfie Rankin, Australian Furry in Second Life

Episode 3 is live and it features an interview with veteran Australian Second Lifer, Wolfie Rankin. We discuss a wide range of topics including furries, ABC Island and the Australian community in Second Life.

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For details on how to automatically receive these podcasts, check our podcast page.

Any feedback on the podcast is welcome and feel free to comment below this post. Suggestions of future guests or topics also very welcome.

Linden Lab offers a further Australian job opportunity

Linden Lab are recruiting for Production Operations developers and systems engineers in Australia (and Singapore, the US and UK).

All the details here. It’s good to see the Australian contingent is growing. Who knows, maybe those Australia-based servers are getting closer.

Report: over 100 youth-oriented virtual worlds

Virtual Worlds Management have released a report showing more than a hundred youth-oriented worlds are either live or in development. The data was compiled from their own news site and a full list is viewable including links to further information.

Seeing such a list further emphasises the faith business has in the virtual world platform but given that it’s still early days for virtual worlds, I’d expect a significant number on that list to struggle to gain a significant foothold in the face of such widespread competition.

VastPark tools go public

VastPark today announced the public release (albeit an alpha release) of a number of its tools. You can now download a browser to view creations dynamically, a Viewer for “viewing the virtual experience in a static and controlled environment”, an Asset Publisher to get everything online and VastServer for real-time, multi-user interaction.

The release is to get the tools into as many hands as possible prior to the second stress test being held on the 22nd April.

If you’re brave enough to use some alpha release tools, let us know what you think of VastPark so far. I can’t actually do it myself as there’s no Mac version as yet.

Babelswarm – Australia Council launches Second Life art project

An Australia Council project that was initially announced nearly a year ago, has come to fruition.

Babelswarm is the final product of writer Justin Clemens, visual artist Christopher Dodds and musician/artist Adam Nash and it’s being launched this evening at 5.30pm, Friday 11th April. It’s a simultaneous launch in Second Life and in Lismore, NSW at the Lismore Regional Gallery.

The Australia Council describes Babelswarm:

The installation, a metaphor for the Tower of Babel, uses voice recognition software that converts the spoken word of real and virtual participants into 3-D letterform images in an evolving tower of words. The artwork is a simultaneous installation in Second Life and in a real world gallery, where visitors can be involved directly in its creation via a computer interface.

Babelswarm installation

The Australia Council’s chairman, former QANTAS CEO James Strong, is upbeat about the use of Second Life for artists and the Australia Council’s support of such endeavours: “Virtual worlds like Second Life are fast becoming mainstream platforms for artistic interaction; we are keen to provide pathways for artists to continue to innovate in these rich digital environments. The Australia Council supports artist residencies in many places in the real world; it is only natural for us to help artists explore the creative possibilities of residencies in virtual worlds.”

The Lismore Regional Gallery is located at 131 Molesworth Street, Lismore, NSW. The exhibition will run until April 23, 2008. The Babelswarm blog has much more detail of the installation.

Check it out in-world

(Pictures: Babelswarm, 2008)

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