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324 lines
21 KiB
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324 lines
21 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 4395
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Title: HPR4395: Second Life
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr4395/hpr4395.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-26 00:13:49
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---
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This is Hacker Public Radio Episode 4395 for Friday the 6th of June 2025.
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Today's show is entitled, Second Life.
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It is hosted by Lee and is about 27 minutes long.
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It carries a clean flag.
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The summary is, Lee talks to Ellsbyth about a persistent online virtual world.
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Hi, I'm Lee.
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I'm going to be talking to Ellsbyth about Second Life today.
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Can you tell us a little bit about how you came to be using Second Life?
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I have been using Second Life for 20 years, maybe poster to 21.
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It was really early on to when Second Life originally started.
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My very first avatar was a tiny little, they call them tinies then, they call them
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dinkies now.
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It was a little lame.
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Yeah, and I started there and I've been playing often on since.
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What introduced you to it?
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How did you get the idea there was something that you wanted to do?
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I saw some information about it and I had some friends that were playing it that started
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out then.
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I was part of the tiny crowd back in Raglanshire.
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It's still a thing, Raglanshire is still a location here that dinkies now still use and
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it used to be like a whole community.
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I'll be honest, I know it exists but I don't know if there's homes and stuff there but
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it was a whole community back then.
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She, whatever animal you could imagine, they had them.
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So you really were looking like the animal?
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Compared to anthropomorphs, the day they're nowhere near the same but they are a bit anthropomorph
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and it's interesting because there is a furry community that does anthropomorph.
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My avi does have that in second life currently but I also have an alt that's another avi
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that has a dinky which is the tiny and it's different.
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It's not the same so most morphs are usually human size and dinkies are tiny.
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What sort of games would you be playing and what sort of interactions would you have?
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It was very social.
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It's mostly they had little clubs that you would go and listen to music and you know back
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then back when I started it started on little round pose balls like I showed you when
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we went to that one region.
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So those are the orbs that when you interact with them they let you dance in a certain way.
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With those you would have two balls if you wanted to dance with someone else.
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So one person would sit on one, one person would sit on another and each ball was designed
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to coordinate and have them dance together.
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In the 20 years since that happened there is far more advanced more.
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There's even HUDs you can just put on and offer to dance with somebody and you'll just
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slow dance.
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A HUD is a head up display, something that will appear in front of your screen.
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Actually maybe we should backtrack.
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What actually is the experience of being in second life like what you're able to see?
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Oh wow, the sum it up that you can see whatever you want to see, you can do whatever you
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want to do in second life, you can build or create whatever you want to.
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So my experience of second life is you running it on your PC or you're gaming console and
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you're in a 3D world and you're controlling what's called an avatar and that represents
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you in the 3D world.
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And this avatar can interact with other avatars and other objects in the 3D world.
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And it can move and explore the landscape, it can walk or it can even fly or it can be
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in a vehicle that's fairly immersive 3D world that's been generated and you're interacting
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inside.
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Yes, very much so.
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Well recently the only way you could play second life was on a computer and so you
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would have what we call a viewer and a lot of people will start out with this original
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base second life viewer which has come a long way since I started.
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People that are a little more experienced with second life want a little more.
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Not that the second life viewer can't do all these things but there are just some options
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on the firestorm viewer.
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Five storms in name with the most popular viewer.
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I would say it's probably the most popular non-second life viewer.
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People that are a little more advanced and a little more technical might use Black Dragon
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or not people that don't have as good of graphics on their systems they can use something
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called Genesis or Alchemy.
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There are a lot more gentle on the graphics and then recently you can do the social aspect
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so really the only thing you can do is move around teleport to destinations and talk with
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people is the second life mobile viewer which is pretty handy if you're on the go or you're
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running a business and need to communicate but yeah.
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Those second life works in the client server model right so you've got a client running
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on your local machine but it's connected to a server where the shared 3D world and its
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mechanics really exist and this is rendered on your viewer.
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Oh yeah yes yes there are a lot of servers each region will be run by a server and a region
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or a sim depending on who you are.
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Mainland regions or sims are generally called regions.
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Private sims like what we're at right now are usually called just sims but it's basically
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a square grid and each one of those square grids is on a server and there's several servers.
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Data-based servers to be able to navigate everything.
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And who's running the service?
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It's Lyndon Labs hosts the servers.
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You have to purchase if like we purchase this region from Lyndon Labs and as long as
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we pay on it it's ours.
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We can do whatever we have full estate rights we can do whatever we want.
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There is an area of second life called Mainland that is owned and run by second life.
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So you can basically rent, call it paying here so whatever amount of land you want to
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pay for you can pay for there but you don't have the right to make looking at the area
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that our region is at right now there's a lot of hills and valleys and stuff like that.
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You don't have the freedom to make the land work the way you want to on Mainland.
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How much does second life cost to play to just start playing it?
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It doesn't cost anything to start playing it but just like in real life if you want to
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buy clothes you have to shop for those clothes and those clothes are made by creators in
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world.
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Lyndon Labs when you start second life you'll get a base avatar and that avatar will
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be clothed but it's not well we just recently updated your avis.
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You set up for me something called a bento avatar skin if that's the right word.
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That sums it up I guess a little bit so we got you an avi that does bento animations.
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bento has to do with the animations the avatar itself you can change the shape and you
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can make it look whatever way you want to by adding skins by adding tattoo layers by
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adding hair we have you in a blazer with a top and a paired khaki pants and some kind
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of Doc Martin looking shoes and then on my Abby I have a full body tattoo so I have
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stuff that I put in my hair too.
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I seem to remember that these different components were coming from different creators and they
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were brought separately in the marketplace and then combined to make an overall appearance
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for the avatar.
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Yes when we did your avi we did go mostly marketplace except for items like the body and the skin
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and the head basically to get your body to look natural and to move naturally you have
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to buy a head that is programmed or coded or scripted to have your face move and you
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know move naturally and then you have to have an animation override to get your body to
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act naturally you know what you don't just stand stiff in one place like a you do all sorts
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of posture and fidgeting and that kind of thing and it just looks natural.
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Right and there's tons and tons of options to choose from I just picked one random one
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for you to start out with my AO is definitely more detailed than yours so I do tend to shift
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and fiddle and fidget and my fingers move a little little more than yours do.
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Sorry the AO stands for animation override.
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Yes so there's a lot of components to creating an avi that looks the way you want it to.
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Out of the box very first avi has come a long way they call them sendra avis now they
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used to call them roof avis the original avis were called roofs but almost everybody who
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sticks around in second life for a while winds up upgrading their their avi because the
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newbie avis which have improved a ton are still very much newbie avi.
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You can spot them in my life or at least the experience second life players will know
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that they're using their basic one that came when they started the game and I think it's
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fair to say they might be a little bit of snobbery about people are very new to the game.
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There is and it's not intentional either it's just we have lived like my best friend
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and I in real life and then that I met in second life she and I will openly admit we're
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a bit snobbish and it's not because we're trying to be rude it's just because we have
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spent so much real life money to create our avis the way that we want them to look.
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You say avis you implying that you have more than one isn't that the case?
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I have more than one avi but we just shorten avatar to avi.
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Any time you control one avatar but the avatar can have many different appearances and you
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can choose from those appearances by swapping out various options.
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Yeah you can have one avatar that looks as many different ways as you want to so I on
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this particular avatar that I'm on right now this is my main avatar I have my human avatar
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I have a panther avatar I have a wyvern avatar I have and a wyvern is not even remotely human
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like it's a creature yeah you have to use a deformer to get it you know to shape your
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avatar the way the wyvern looks.
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So second life is a program for human light avatars and so it takes some sort of a process
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to happen to map that humanoid shape into something that's not humanoid.
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You know how we were talking about the dinky's earlier or the tiny avatars earlier those
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if I dropped into a dinky which I don't have on this avi it would completely distort
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and deform my body into that small little package it'll just take the human avatar and
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just crunch it down.
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So if I were to put clothes on that fit my human avi they wouldn't fit right if I were
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deformed.
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This is like you can imagine a film where someone turns into a werewolf and they completely
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distort our shape.
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Yes there are werewolves in second life too there's actually a whole game system called
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bloodlines where you can be werewolf or vampire.
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Okay that brings us on something else so what are the different activities that people
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do on second life?
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Oh wow there's so many you can there's several different farming systems there's DFS
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the digital farm system which I have that system and I enjoy it quite a bit and currently
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not doing it because it does take up a lot of time.
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But then there's the you and there's the funny farm and my story are all farming living
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systems role play systems Akasha has she's made her own system where you can do chores.
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She has little mesh chores like what do we have she has a garden chores set where there's
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like ten different garden plants that you are harvesting and you get stars for it there's
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a whole bunch of different things that you can do.
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Mad P has actual escape rooms and hunts.
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So those are like gaming experiences where you enter into a simulation within a simulation
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to play a game.
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A game within a game.
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The best way to describe second life is literally that it is your second life it's just
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virtual.
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You know there's a monetary system there's an inventory system so you know we're looking
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out over my house over here I have a house here that has furniture and it's decorated and
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there's eating systems where you can eat as if you were eating in real life and those
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farm are living systems that I was talking about before they track stats kind of like
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any role playing game that has stats hunger thirst and these are all optional things that
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you can embellish the basic second life with and they're created not necessarily by Lyndon
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Labs who run the thing they're created by users who use second life.
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The whole point of second light is that it's user directed.
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Second light is like the shell they're like the host.
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They do maintain mainland for people that don't want to invest to have your own personal
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region you either have to rent it for someone.
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There's actually a real estate company in second life that makes millions a year off of
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real estate they were the first virtual millionaires in the world.
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To have a million Lyndon dollars is the currency of the world.
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No million USD.
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Ah million real dollars.
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Cap.
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Okay.
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They make a lot of money in second life and in fact recently they announced that they
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do about five billion dollars a year.
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The total real world revenue associated with second life.
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It's all in USD that's users from all over the world.
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So we were talking about how you've decorated your houses you've decorated the landscape
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what's that process like what is the world like to begin with then what have you done
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to transform into something that you want to live in.
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This square if you look at your mini map this square was a flat piece of lamp.
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Right.
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We put a terrain hills valleys rivers ponds the hills and valleys and then the actual
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ponds and rivers are user created the tree everything everything is user created now.
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Most of the stuff is stuff that we had in our inventory because we've we've been collecting
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items over the years the decades at this point.
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But there is the marketplace and in world stores to buy other items and anyone can sell
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and that marketplace if they create things that they want to share of others.
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Yes.
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I mean the answer to that is yes however the caveat to that is you cannot sell something
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that is not your intellectual property or you haven't made a significant change to the
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item to make it something unique.
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So there is something called full perm or full permission objects that you can buy on
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the marketplace that you can make your own by changing the textures adding scripts you
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know making it look different you know.
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So these would be like you get the full source code you can make whatever you like out of
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it but not all the things are like that a lot of the things that just for you to use
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yourself you're not able to duplicate them or will so that they maintain the value to
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them.
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Right exactly.
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So like you and I have been working on the SL read which is basically like an e-reader
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in second life.
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That mesh is creative commons mesh.
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I did not create the mesh but I did free texture the mesh.
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We've added a script that you have created and that is your intellectual property and
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then we're adding this all together to make it combine to look different than the original
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item.
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It operates uniquely and that's what creators do is they make stuff that people would want
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to purchase that has some value.
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Like officially starting my business the business was last year.
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I have been dabbling in creating since I started because it's very artistic by nature
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and it's very creative by nature for instance.
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If I were to want to add something to the area that we're standing in right now I would
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need to raise a box.
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So it literally just go in your viewer click on build and then click on the cube and then
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click on the cube it pays in the world.
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Yes but I do have to be careful because this area is already decorated.
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If I wanted to res something out here I would have to put this cube out and make it big
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enough to res on and then I could put like say look in my inventory for a rock and then
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I could res out a rock.
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Well that's going to be a process in itself because I'm just going to res something out
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here and it's probably going to blow up in your face just so you know.
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Right so we see a big bow that's appeared on top of that square.
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Right so if I want to put this here I would have to adjust it and make it fit.
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So you're changing the size and the shape and the position and the new orientation you
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can change.
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Yeah and that makes the land unique so if all we did was put hills and mountains on
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the land it would and we just did a terrain it would look boring we were just talking
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about putting grass out earlier before we started this.
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The grass creates that realism you know that.
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And although the grass is in the unique place and is unique bit of grass it's based on
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like a template that you know that you've bought and so you can apply that same piece
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of grass in hundreds of different places across the terrain and you can slightly change
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its style.
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Is that right?
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Yes so the grass that we're using here there's three different styles of it and I'm just
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going to walk down here real quick because I want to show you that if all you do is put
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grass then again you're just creating almost the 2D effect.
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So this stream here has ferns it has reeds it has water it has rocks and all of it is
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one piece well it's a bunch of pieces put together to create this stream but this one piece
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that I'm holding on to there's a bunch of different pieces to it to make it look like
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this is a little stream that you would run into in real life and then over here I have
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more grass.
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And so these are common objects so interior anyone in second life could buy and own and
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possess these or perhaps not own but buy and possess these objects and they could res
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out these objects wherever they like the fact that you're coordinating many different
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objects along with the terrain and styling objects makes every single place that you've
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worked on unique in its own way.
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Yes, yes and that's the goal is to make to give it more than just a mundane look.
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Like recently I replaced a tree with a weeping willow because I wanted to add some dimension
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to not just having the same tree out but I also added some 3nance lace and a little
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log with mushrooms you know it's greater than some of its parts right and it seems to
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take a lot of artistry as well as some technical skill to really make a nice scene or a nice
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building or a nicely decorated room or wherever else you're creating or coordinating or
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putting together.
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Absolutely, I am not as good as Akasha is.
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I did pretty well I'm not trying to to my horn but I did pretty well here but it used
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to take Akasha coming in to help me redirect my artistic vision to add and subtract things
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as necessary.
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What do you think you get out of having created a landscape, a building and decorated it
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how you like and then you're actually playing inside that environment compared to another
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game or another experience?
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Um okay so for me it's a feeling of home.
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I'm away from home wherever you are, you're home when you're locked in.
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And it creates a little bit of dynamic to the social environment for instance you know
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this region has four areas you have the shopping district you have Nami's Jurassic Park
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in her home and then you have Akasha's area in her home and then you have our area and
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our homes and they're all kind of connected that they're all unique to us.
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So what's in my area is not going to be the same as what is in Akasha's area but I can
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also take and walk over to her area and talk to her like I would go talk to my neighbor
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you know same with Nami.
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So it's almost like you're really living there there's so much detail that it takes
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on the life of its own the environment the interaction of the people it takes on its
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own life.
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Absolutely it is again it is a second life it is a virtual life.
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I can do all that I can go and do all the things that the world has to offer in second
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life that I could do in real life.
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If I wanted to if I wanted to go to London I could search the area search and I could
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probably find someone's replica of London.
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Yeah I know I know for a fact that there is an area that does the pyramids for Egypt
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there's there's replicas of anything but you you can search it or you can go and see
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and do anything that you could see in real life it's just going to be on a screen.
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Okay thanks very much Elspur for sharing your experiences of second life just for full
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disclosure would you like to explain or your relationship is with Lyndon Labs who run
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second life.
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My relationship with Lyndon Labs is that I use their client I use second life.
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I over the years I have volunteered to help out with some different areas in second life
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whether it be welcome hubs or the second life birthday bash or what you know those type
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of things.
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So you're the use of the environment their platform as it were okay let's wrap up here
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is there anything that you'd like to say that you might have wanted to say but not said
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or that comes to mind.
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People should know about second life second life can be done free but you're not going
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to want to and that costs real life money so be aware of what you're getting into if
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you're going to play a game like final fantasy you're going to pay a monthly fee you know
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to be able to play the game if you want upgrades you're going to pay for that second life
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is the same but there it has its own economy so I want everybody to know that you can do
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it free but you're probably not going to want to so come explore it see if you like it
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and then see if you actually want to spend your hobby time hobby money on that.
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Oh hobbies almost always cross money some money exactly that's the way I chalk up my my
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expenditures for second life is this is my hobby.
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With that thanks again and bye to you and our listeners.
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You have been listening to Hacker Public Radio at Hacker Public Radio does work today
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