Gwyn inside a 'warp tunnel'

NeXT Life

Time Warp

Unless you have been hiding in a warp hole somewhere (like I am!) you might have missed the latest announcement from Linden Lab: Second Life: The Next Generation, or SL2, or — as I prefer to call it — NeXT Life, is currently being developed, and the first beta will probably appear sometime in late 2015/early 2016 or thereabouts.

To make sure that current residents don’t panic, Ebbe ‘Linden’ Altberg, current CEO of Linden Lab, was anxious to pass the message, during the Third-Party Developer Meeting which happened last Friday, that Second Life is not closing down. Linden Lab will continue to support Second Life. They will just launch a separate, independent, alternative, brand shiny new virtual world. And no, it’s not High Fidelity, although they’ve hinted they might use some of the open-source code published by Philip Rosedale’s other company.

Here is a summary of what we know so far about ‘NeXT Life’, copied shamelessly from Jessica Lyon’s post on the Firestorm Viewer blog:

  • The current plan is that the new platform will not be open source at least initially. (This means there will be no Third-Party Viewer alternatives at least initially, and there will be a new viewer built by LL.) This could change over the course of time.
  • LL intends to continue maintaining and developing Second Life while they develop the new platform and will operate them in parallel even after the new platform is launched. SL will remain as long as it is profitable for LL to continue operating it.
  • The new platform will be built “in the spirit of Second Life” and will put focus on content creators as the primary customer. LL wants to make it so good SL users will want to migrate to it.
  • Assets (inventory) from Second Life will “likely” not be transferable because they do not want to constrain what is possible by maintaing [sic] backwards compatibility. This wasn’t said with complete certainty, though, which suggests some content may be permitted.
  • Second Life will continue to be improved, albeit on a smaller scale. Oz Linden is now Technical Director and in charge of a small team who will keep development in SL going.
  • This new platform is still in very early stages, and it is unlikely even a beta will be seen before next year.

Inara Pey seems to be publicly leading the group of enthusiasts about this change. You can see on her blog a reply from Peter Gray, Linden Lab’s Director of Global Communications. His message can be summarised as:

Don’t panic, get excited!

Well. I’m not so sure about that.

Abandon Ship!

You see, the problem here is that Linden Lab is expecting everybody to be excited about the huge change, without telling us a lot about what’s going on — just the essentials — and without taking into consideration that, by 2016, there will be serious competition. Perhaps for the first time in the Lab’s history.

Second Life competing with ‘NeXT Life’

Because of the uncertainty in SL’s long-term future, it’s conceivable that the SL resident population will diminish, and the rate of shrinkage very likely accelerate even more (so sad, now that we were almost recovering from the losses and finally achieving some equilibrium!).

This is a classical issue: every time that Linden Lab announces something drastic, the population diminishes. When they shut down gambling, they got a 30% loss in residents. Shut down banking, another slice of the population shrunk. Move adult content to Zindra, and the population shrunk again. Change the ToS to make content creators wary of what will happen, and the population shrinks again. Even when ‘forcing’ people to use the new viewers, the population shrunk! In fact, if we look at all the major decisions made by Linden Lab in the past, almost all resulted in loss of population and a contraction of the land mass.

There are a few exceptions. When LL launched SL, of course everything was growing! When they announced the SL 1.4 Viewer, a major turning point in terms of features, with a Mac version, SL started to grow like crazy. But the biggest single change that got the population growing exponentially was when they announced that basic accounts would be free.

No other measure brought in a significant number of new users (that remained around for a long time). And there have been tons of good reasons for that — incredible technical advances on the viewer, a revamped Marketplace (so potential new users would get a taste of what the content inside SL looks like before joining), Linden homes for premium users, mesh support, the ‘navigation mesh’ for AIs and gamers, and even SLGO, allowing SL to be used on tablets and low-end computers. The list is pretty much endless, but did it have any effect? No. It just made current residents happier — specially the content creators, having new tools to play with, which in turn generated awesome new content, which in turn made customers happier, which in turn made the in-world economy slightly recover, growing a bit. There is always the odd new resident that does, indeed, appear. I have spent some hours on the Welcome Areas recently (mostly to test an infamous text chat bug which only affects Mac users, still unfixed after a year of reporting it and affecting tens of thousands of users…) and it’s true that we still get the occasional new resident there.

It is thus quite unlikely that this major announcement, even considering it’s not merely a major overhaul, but a completely new virtual world designed from scratch, will attract many new users. Why should it? The best that might happen is that everybody in SL switches over to ‘NeXT Life’. They won’t get more users just because they introduce new, shiny tech. But I’ll expand this further!

So what I see as a major problem is that SL starts losing residents and landmass very fast, well before ‘NeXT Life’ is due, and LL’s revenue stream collapses. They expect more revenues from ‘NeXT Life’ to compensate, but… will the users joining ‘NeXT Life’ (almost all coming from SL) compensate what LL will lose with a shrinking SL? And, if the math doesn’t balance out on LL’s accounting department, then the big question is, what will LL do? Shut down ‘NeXT Life’? It might be too late — SL might not ‘recover’ those users again. If things go too far, they might come to a point where they cannot support the effort of maintaining the whole company — because the revenue from SL will be dwindling further and further, and the ‘new’ revenue for ‘NeXT Life’ will not be enough to compensate for the overall loss.

The only solution left at that dramatic point is to close doors and liquidate the company.

Now, many might argue that, in the past, there was not a significant exodus of users that ruined LL. Quite the contrary: as said, LL certainly has made terrible announcements in the past, and each has shrunk SL further and further — but never to the point of collapse. In fact, until recently, LL never felt the ‘push’ to change their business model: even on a reduced income flow, they did manage well so far. One can argue that the extra revenues from the Marketplace — as well as a slight increase in LindeX exchange rates, when LL started being more careful about allowing third-party exchanges to operate — might have compensated for the loss of income. Inara Pey also pointed out that, of the five products launched, two have been written-off (hardly surprising, a company attempting to diverisfy rarely hits the ground running), one has since been spun-off into an independent label (Versu), the fourth (Blocksworld) apears to be generating “acceptable returns” based on its month-on-month tracking through App Annie, and the last (Patterns) has yet to be officially launched, although it seems to have a popular following, so it will “be interesting to see what happens when it does eventually launch.”

The truth is that we have no clue about those claims — LL is not showing their numbers. We can calculate very roughly how much LL makes from Second Life alone, and even from the LindeX, but not from the rest of their products. So, we can only speculate that they are compensating the reduced income from land sales with other sources of revenue, and this has worked so far, but… it doesn’t allow LL to grow. It allows LL to survive with a reasonable amount of profit. And no matter how ‘destructive’ their announcements have been, in general, they lose more from ‘erosion’ over the years than from a direct consequence of their terrible announcements.

So why should 2016 be different? The main reason is that there will be two new players in town: ‘NeXT Life’ will have competitors — while Second Life has not. And it’s worth taking a look at those competitors first.

High Fidelity: The hippy virtual world company

Linden Lab is a very traditional company, in spite of their innovative product. They ‘go by the book’ on almost everything, especially in the post-Rosedale years. Although they dabble with open-source code and adopt some development methodologies typical of open-source companies, they’re not really ‘serious’ about open-source development. If they were, they would be just like every other company with an open-source product (say, Automattic, to give a well-known example): everybody would be contributing to it. Instead, what LL has is a mess of independently forked viewer projects, all using 99% of their code, and many of which have incredibly innovative ways of dealing with things — but which LL hardly ever considers using in their own code as well. This is so totally wrong that one might ask what was the point in opening the source code — if not for crowdsourcing free work, then what?

High Fidelity, Philip Rosedale’s ‘other’ company, is completely freakish. Everything they have, except the core services (we’ll get to that in a bit), is open source. A core team of developers does most of the work, but anyone can contribute. In fact, in some cases, High Fidelity will pay for your contribution. Or hire you part-time. Or even full-time. The point is that there is a large crowd of developers, some working for free, some for money, some as employees, and this huge mess is brought together towards developing a unified goal.

If you are a regular reader, then you know that my ‘prediction’ of any successful business/product comes from looking at the financial numbers. My spiritual mentor in business analysis, Kevin O’Leary, on one of the Shark Tank shows, once shook his head at someone who had a nice product to send (physical) postcards from a website. He told them that the Silicon Valley Bubble had exploded. It wasn’t the time to launch a ‘cool idea’ (that can be copied so easily by others) without a solid business plan. They had neither — the idea was trivial, easily copied, and their revenue model hopelessly flawed. All they had was some sales and a good background as marketing managers from MySpace. In fact, the very same idea is being used by many competitors. O’Leary, as an investor — not as a venture capitalist — is wary of ‘ideas’ without any ‘business’ behind it. What he looks at is how well a company fares — as a company, not as an idea. And that means worrying about getting customers, of getting paid by them, of generating a revenue stream, of being profitable. Not about how much money they can raise from venture capitalists and business managers to keep digging a hole in the treasury — that leads, most of the time, to total collapse. Silicon Valley companies still do that all the time, because some of them get lucky and get bought by one industry giant — Google, Microsoft, Facebook, Yahoo… — which allows them to make plenty of money from selling the company even without any customers. Most, however, disappear forever from the face of the Earth, taking all the money of their investors with them.

So how will High Fidelity (HF) work? Philip Rosedale knows very well that one of the biggest hurdles of Second Life is how expensive land is (both for customers but also for the company running the servers which host content). Make it cheap, and things will improve. But if land is too cheap, you cannot afford the infrastructure to run it. Therefore, Rosedale’s strategy is clever: he gives away all the code, and let people run it on their servers instead. You buy a server, lease one, get a VPS, go to Amazon and order some cloud services, use your own laptop… that’s up to you. Install the software, launch it, and you have your virtual world. As big as you wish. Then you need others to come and visit you and buy your content. This is where High Fidelity’s ‘core servers’ come in.

A full discussion of the business model is presented much better on HF’s own site, but you can understand that a virtual world will have users (who wish to go everywhere — from visiting your house inside your laptop, to a huge city running on thousands of servers somewhere), and that means dealing with identity (and inventory, but we’ll come to that later). Users need to know where to go, and that means a location service — HF calls it ‘name servers’, because they clearly wish to see this as the ‘3D Internet’. And, of course, you will wish to buy and sell content, and buy and sell land. That means having a currency.

Rosedale also learned from surprising sources — from Bitcoin to Kitely! His model is based on the following assumptions: if I lease a server to put some content there and others come to visit me, I ought to be paid for the bandwidth/CPU costs. On the other hand, when I visit others, I should be the one paying. This sounds suspiciously like Kitely’s business model, especially now that they have added Hypergrid access: if you wish HG-enabled users to visit your regions on Kitely, then either you pay for them to stay at your place (they will be consuming resources that you lease from Kitely), or you have to demand that they pay for those resources. The difference under Kitely’s model is that Kitely is the sole entity providing servers for content creation. HF, by contrast, allows anyone to be a ‘virtual world provider’. And yes, you guessed it, they are using their own cryptocurrency — deliberately not Bitcoin, because Rosedale wants to have a currency that doesn’t fluctuate wildly, but predictably, just like the Linden dollar. It’s not a cryptocurrency for speculation, but for exchanging bandwidth/CPU costs — and for buying and selling content.

HF themselves will not ‘own’ any servers to provide content. These will all be in the hands of the users. That sounds really very much like the Metaverse on Neal Stephenson’s Snow Crash — people group together, buy their own servers, and interconnect them. Users in Snow Crash with low-end computers, running areas of the Metaverse from their laptops, may have low-rez avatars. Since HF uses a voxel-based renderer, this might very well be the case. Jump to a high-end, bandwidth-rich server, using your high-tech desktop with a gamers’ video card, and you might get spectacularly detailed environments, rendered at very high frame rates; jump to someone’s laptop on a free Wi-Fi connection, and the image will automatically degrade to handle the bandwidth demands. And, of course, while this is happening, cryptocurrency is being exchanged between servers and users. So, under HF, there will be a ‘land business’ which is strictly tied to the ability to maintain high-end servers with good throughput. But that won’t avoid home-grown solutions to participate (I have almost 10 MBps upstreaming bandwidth at home — plenty to make some money with HF once I get the software to compile!! hehe). And obviously there will be a huge content marketplace — think about what Kitely is doing, selling OpenSimulator content to all Hypergrid-enabled grids. Last but not least, to be able to navigate across this hugely asymmetric jungle of ‘nodes’ in the HF Metaverse, you will need to register your server with HF’s core servers. This will not only provide location services (for others to be able to find your server), but also provide you with a digital certificate and secure authentication procedures. So, yes, your sold content won’t be able to be opened up by anyone who hasn’t paid you for it. It might even be copied among users, but it will be digitally encrypted, so it will be worthless — unless, of course, you got a signed digital certificate from the original creator, allowing you (and only you!) to open it. 100% secure? Of course not — digital certificates can be hacked, and so can cryptocurrency be hacked as well, but it will be tremendously difficult to do so!

Where does HF’s revenue come from? When you buy something at the Marketplace, HF charges a fee. If you exchange some cryptocurrency for ‘real world’ money, HF charges a fee. If you wish to make your server available to everybody, and register for HF’s location services, you pay them a fee. And possibly if you wish to have an avatar with an unique name, and the ability to roam HF’s virtual world, buy and sell services, engage in the ‘land business’, etc., very likely HF will charge you a fee as well. Stop paying the fee, and they’ll revoke your digital certificate, and you won’t be able to do anything outside your home-grown virtual world.

So how can HF ‘survive’ only from those fees? After all, LL also charges fees for the LindeX and the Marketplace (and so does Kitely). But LL can’t survive on fees only; they need the very lucrative land model to survive. Well, HF is not in the land business. They don’t need servers. They don’t need sysadmins to stand-by on duty 24h/7 to oversee the servers. They don’t need bandwidth — except for the core servers, and, if Rosedale is clever, he’ll just go for cloud services — the more customers he gets, the more virtual servers on the cloud he needs, so he pays just the ‘right’ amount for providing those services. Contrast that to LL which have to plan for peak performance even when 99% of Second Life is empty — and besides owning all the hardware, they still have to establish contracts to deal with bandwidth during peak hours and pay them premium for the privilege.

HF is lean and mean! That is a very sound business model!

Will this attract customers? Perhaps. As always, content creators and a new class of ‘land barons’ will have an edge in HF. Content creators sell content, so that generates an income for them, with which they can roam HF’s metaverse and easily pay for access everywhere. They will be the ones having more fun. Similarly, people owning big servers able to handle truckloads of content without a glitch will be more often visited, and, as such, they will earn more money — and they will, in turn, also be able to roam the virtual world with their pockets full of cryptocurrency. It’s the ‘average consumer’ who will be constantly paying for everything — for content and access beyond their home computer. While it’s highly likely that universities, NGOs, public entities, etc. might set up their own servers and not charge anything to visitors — thus giving even the poorest user some chance to see and do something on HF — I imagine that the majority of HF users will ‘stay at home’ to avoid spending money, just occasionally roaming the virtual world to buy some content, attend parties, etc. But it’s truly a completely different model than LL’s Second Life. Will people get used to it? I mean ‘normal’ people — consumers, not content creators. The answer is unknown. HF will certainly need to wait a few years to see what kind of in-world society and economy develops. They can afford the costs of running the core servers at a loss during that time because, well, they don’t need to support a huge infrastructure.

There is also a hidden risk. Because all code is open source, some people might simply interconnect themselves and forget all about HF. They can, in a manner similar to OSGrid, just ignore content on HF’s ‘official’ virtual world and create their own ‘underground’ servers. They can create a model where all content is for free, and all visits to each other’s servers is free, too — and develop their own location service. All this is true, but… it also means that professional content developers won’t be offering anything on those ‘underground’ servers. Ultimately, the survival of HF is the same as always: will this attract enough people to make spending time (and money!) on HF worthwhile, and generate income to HF?

Surely during the first few years this won’t be an issue. Very likely this will immediately attract thousands of anxious users, eager to see the wonderful new technology that Philip Rosedale has developed. A few content creators, looking at expanding their market, will learn how to upload meshes, see them converted to voxels, and see if they can sell anything. It might work or not. It’s impossible to predict. And, of course, the big question is — if HF attracts, say, 5,000 users (what LL had back in 2004 — a time when they wondered if they should go on with SL or not), and generates just a few dozens of thousands of dollars every month, will that be enough to keep on going?

(Needless to say, the academic community will be delighted to tinker around with another free, open-source virtual world — especially one that will look much better than OpenSimulator, and promises to deliver way better graphics and performance on much lower-ended computers. Even if HF fails as a company, academic researchers might stick to HF for quite a while afterwards, even continuing to improve and contribute code to it.)

Why should you not move to HF? Well, on one side, and that’s the good news, there will be a very easy-going ToS — because content is not hosted by HF, that means you could run servers doing practically everything. Depending on how Rosedale sets up the terms of use of their cryptocurrency, and how he fights his way with his lawyers, this could mean virtual worlds where not only adult content will be widespread, but gambling and banking will be allowed — because, ultimately, HF is not responsible for anything that happens on your computer. They just provide software and interconnection. They don’t provide anything else. This might be a huge advantage for many.

Of course, HF is not compatible with SL and OpenSimulator, so it means forgetting about all your content, all your inventory, all your friends, all your groups. It’s a completely new, separate place. It means starting all from scratch and having nobody else around. For many, this is not a problem. I have no doubt that thousands will experiment with HF — as thousands did with Blue Mars and Cloud Party. The problem is the long run. If content creators are not persuaded to tweak their content to work well inside HF’s voxel-based renderer, the world might remain empty. And a content-less world doesn’t attract anyone; people are far more demanding these days than they were in 2003…

After all, new HF users will have bought an Oculus Rift and a gazillion of VR gadgets — HF supports all of them — and expect to have something to do besides looking at the incredibly ugly and primitive avatars that HF has for now… there must be so much more around to catch their interest.

FaceWorld

Sooner or later — and probably sooner! — Facebook will launch their own virtual world as well1. While some people expect that not to happen in less than 5 years, I have some doubts about that. I think that they will be able to launch an early beta around the time that both ‘NeXT Life’ and High Fidelity are doing the same (HF has a slight edge here, since you can already download the code, compile it, and register with HF’s servers — it’s possible, just very hard to do). Why? Because Facebook already has some of the coolest former developers at Linden Lab, snatched by Cory when he moved to Facebook. And on top of that they have game developer superstar John Carmack from Oculus Rift. Zuckerberg has clearly stated that he wants a virtual world with user-generated content, where people will be able to buy and sell content from a Marketplace — paying a small fee to Facebook.

Facebook’s virtual world, of course, will be absolutely proprietary. No mucking around with source code on people’s home computers! Instead, their business model will be very closely aligned with Second Life — or ‘NeXT Life’. They will host content, probably free, allowing upgrades for a fee, on behalf of everybody — but perhaps only probably.

Why? The huge difference between Facebook and HF/LL is that Facebook is filthy rich. If Cory and Carmack tell Zuckerberg that they need ‘a few dozen thousand servers and a few hundreds of Terabits of bandwidth’, all Zuckerberg will say is, ‘consider it done’ and send an email to Procurement. If they need to keep their virtual world alive for 3-5 years without making a single cent, they can afford all that. In fact, they might even write it off as ‘R&D’ and get tax refunds!

Zuckerberg is not really worried about presenting a detailed business plan as Philip Rosedale has done. He just sees that if he gets a few millions (not thousands) of users shopping on the Facebook VW marketplace every day, even if they just spend a few cents each, he’ll get millions per month. That should be enough. But he’ll get some more.

He said that at the beginning he wouldn’t sell ads. But soon that will change. Maybe they will not be very obtrusive — just a pop-up here and there on the viewer. But that adds a few more cents here and there — multiplied by millions of users.

In the meantime, of course, he’ll get petabytes of consumer data to sell. He will know what kinds of content people buy in VWs, what their shopping habits are, what music will be heard on streaming events. He will know how many people will invite and look up their friends on the Facebook VW — and promptly sell that information to his advertisers. So, for a long while — certainly 3-5 years — he will justify the whole operation as another source of data mining for Facebook’s business. That means that he can hold on for a long, long time.

Of course, there will be no privacy in Facebook’s VW. Everything will be logged. It will also mean no adult content — the liability to Facebook would be huge otherwise — and people will get kicked out for the slightest offense. Being a multi-million-user environment, tech support to users will be next-to-nonexistent, and users will have no recourse when kicked out or scammed. If companies start to look into Facebook’s VW as a means to expand their advertising, then Facebook will hold them in a silver platter, and take good care of them — but I don’t think that Zuckerberg is counting on that. All he wants is to people to have fun with the Oculus Rift inside a VW — driving more sales for the Oculus Rift, of course, but mostly, putting more data on his massive profiling database. In the meantime, Facebook can always replicate the Zynga model — get people hooked on a free service but get them to pay for ‘upgrades’ or ‘special features’. Just a tiny fraction of the users will do that, but when you have millions and millions, there will be plenty willing to pay a bit more for that extra edge.

Will people switch over from Second Life to Facebook’s VW? Honestly, I don’t think that Zuckerberg even cares much about that. Content creators — a few thousand — will most certainly appear, because Zuckerberg can show them numbers: even if only one out of thousand Facebook users joins their VW, that’s 1.3 million users. 1.3 million potential consumers of virtual goods — and that’s just on day one. For a talented Second Life content creator, that means potentially an order of magnitude of more sales. Of course they will try it out. And, being Facebook, they will have the assurance that their content won’t be ‘stolen’. The only thing that will make them hesitate is Facebook’s very likely insistence in keeping all IP rights — as they already do with every picture posted on the 2D Facebook.

Many die-hard SL veterans will be very reluctant to discard their virtual personas, their habits and pleasures they enjoy in SL, in complete privacy — and go to a world totally dominated by Facebook’s absolute control to the tiniest detail. But at least when joining up you’ll instantly know if your friends are there, too, and easily connect with them. So, the world will not be ’empty’ — at least, even if there is not much content at the beginning, you will have hundreds or thousands of friends waiting for you.

Needless to say, this whole discussion about what will happen to SL will never bother Zuckerberg much. In fact, he might be laughing at this time: because, while Linden Lab is shooting again on what remains of their foot, Zuckerberg might just absorb the whole economy and society of Second Life overnight, as soon as he opens the doors — and when Linden Lab shuts down theirs.

It looks like SL’s future is bleak, if they have to compete with such a behemoth with ‘unlimited everything’ — unlimited funds, unlimited bandwidth, unlimited servers, unlimited users. In fact, that’s not quite the case; however, it remains to be seen how Linden Lab tackles this challenge.

Ladies and Gentlemen, Start Your Engines: The Race for the Metaverse is On!

So, during the next 18 months or so, all will depend on what exactly Linden Lab is willing to share with us.

By 2016, Second Life will have to compete with not two, but three platforms. It will have to compete with LL’s ‘other product’, SL2, ‘NeXT Life’, or whatever it will be called. It will have to compete with High Fidelity, at least for a while. It will have to compete with FaceWorld, or Facebook VW.

Second Life, however, has a head start, and one that is definitely not to be overlooked. It has proved that, up until today, it survived as a valid business model for a decade. It has hundreds of thousands of users, and an economy worth 0.5 billion US$ per year. Stagnation or not stagnation, it works, it gets improvements, it still has tons of enthusiasts. It has such an extraordinary amount of content that even if everybody on Planet Earth held their hands full of prims, Second Life would have far more content than that — it’s completely flabbergasting! SL protects very carefully people’s privacy and allows adult content. Because it’s not ‘tied’ to any ‘social giant’, it also means that no information about what you’re doing is being sold to third parties or advertisers. It’s free to join and to use; but land is extraordinarily expensive. In spite of all the naysayers, their rendering engine is not obsolete — just try to see SL maxed out on a decent graphics card running at 100 FPS, and you’ll see that SL looks great. Not perfect, but great. There is still a lot of appeal to it for content developers to become even more creative. Of course, there is a lot of room for improvement — but this improvement is getting harder and harder to accomplish, and that might be the ultimate reason why Ebbe Altberg is giving up on SL.

Now this head start is important, because it sets the kind of expectations that most users of SL have. Most users of SL are not content creators. They are consumers, and they expect that any new virtual world has at least what SL has, but does it bettereasier, and, if possible, cheaper.

SL is very complex at all levels, and that’s why we have complex viewers, complex permission systems, complex land management systems, and complex methods to deal with things. ‘Simplifying’ all that requires ‘dumbing down’ the world, to an extent that it becomes not enjoyable anymore. So, any direct competitor will have to tackle the very difficult choice of making things simpler in terms of interface, but still complex enough to have appeal. Let’s give a stupid example: if any ‘competitor’ also allows beds with sex animations, and someone asks, ‘yes, but how many different animations can I use?’ they expect the answer to be ‘unlimited’. Because that’s what SL promises. That’s what others will need to top.

This is the consumer experience that I’m talking about, not the content creator experience — nor the gamer experience. I’m not implying that everybody is interested in beds with sex animations 🙂 but there is an interest in a certain amount of complexity. It’s not just RPG communities that want better ways to design their games in-world. Even the less technically-oriented resident wants to have millions of options to place furniture in their homes. Just having dozens or even thousands will never be enough. That’s the kind of freedom of choice we enjoy in the real world, which SL has captured perfectly.

So all three competitors will start with a huge handicap: zero content.

The next thing that the common resident will want is to keep in touch with their friends and communities. Here, HF is at the losing end: sorry, guys, you will need to start completely from scratch. Facebook, by contrast, offers you a different community right from the start: your Facebook friends will all be there. ‘NeXT Life’… well, we don’t know. But this is the first thing that they should immediately address: every ‘NeXT Life’ user should have the same identity (avatar name and password), the same friends, the same groups as they already have on SL. Only LL can make that happen, and this is one of the things that is relatively easy to do: it’s not a technical hurdle, it’s a question of policy.

Average residents have spent hundreds if not thousands of dollars — not to mention thousands of hours — in acquiring content. Now, again, HF and Facebook have no solution for them; you have to buy everything from scratch. ‘NeXT Life’ very likely won’t be able to migrate any content, in spite of LL’s vague allusions that ‘this option hasn’t been excluded yet’. They’re not being very honest with us. Textures, notecards, and sound clips are easily transferred; these are not a problem. And, of course, anyone having the original meshes for non-apparel content (buildings, furniture, etc.) will have no problem re-uploading everything. This, however, is also the case for HF and Facebook: if you are the original content creator of a meshed object, there should be no problem in re-uploading it to either of those platforms.

Where LL has an edge is that they can migrate content that you own but have not created. This also includes prim-based (and sculpty-based) content. The major third-party viewers already allow exporting any content to COLLADA files — i.e. meshes. I have tried these tools out very extensively, and the results are absolutely awesome. Of course, the resulting meshes are huge and waste a lot of triangles, but that’s beside the point — it works, so that content can be preserved. The problem is that it only works if you are the creator of all components (including textures); ownership is not enough. The edge that LL has over their competitors is that LL can migrate owned content, not merely authored content (i.e. content that you have created by yourself). This means that if at least this content gets migrated, then ‘NeXT Life’ has an advantage over their competitors. It’s not a tiny advantage; it’s also not huge; but it means that at least you will still carry over some things.

True, any scripted content won’t work anywhere else.

Because all three competitors have different avatar skeletons, this also means that none of your clothes and apparel will work, not even on ‘NeXT Life’. Content creators designing meshed clothes and attachments will need to tweak their meshes to get them uploaded to any of the three virtual worlds; that might be not too hard to do (even with rigged meshes) and allow them to easily start offering their content for sale everywhere. Consumers are out of luck; it will be next-to-impossible to convert the items they own (but haven’t created) in SL to any of the other platforms.

In fact, not even old ‘texture’ clothes from 2005 will work. These rely upon UV maps designed specifically for SL’s avatar mesh. So everything is lost. Some shoes — especially those that do not include feet — might be able to be converted to ‘NeXT Life’, but it’s safer to assume that it would be too difficult to do so.

One possibility would be for ‘NeXT Life’ to allow any avatar skeleton to be used, and, in that case, the SL avatar skeleton could possibly be migrated as well. That would allow pretty much everything unscripted to be transferred to ‘NeXT Life’. This would most certainly give ‘NeXT Life’ a huge advantage over their competitors! However, I imagine that LL will not allow this to happen. The new avatar skeletons will be completely different and will have to look awesome to compete with those gorgeous avatars that (one day) will be created on HF and Facebook. So it would be in the interest of LL to ‘force’ people into completely new avatars, to be able to compete graphically with the other virtual worlds. This is a tough choice to make, because I would certainly believe that a good argument for switching over from SL to ‘NeXT Life’ would be saying, ‘you can bring your avatar and your unscripted clothes with you to NeXT Life’. Of course, the new avatars and the new clothes created for them would be gorgeous and people would soon switch. But we have seen the evolution of texture+sculpty clothes in SL to meshed clothes: it took some time, but the demand for meshed clothing in SL is nowadays overwhelming, and nobody wants to use the old clothes again. The difference is that LL did not prevent people from using prims and sculpties; rather, both co-existed, and will continue to co-exist, but more and more prim-based content gets replaced every day – a long migration period, until, eventually, everything is meshed in SL (if it continues for a long time, of course).

Another thing that LL can do easily is to allow you to keep your Linden dollars. This is mostly a psychological issue, but it means, for those who have a revenue stream in SL, that they can now use the L$ in their account to buy new content in ‘NeXT Life’. This would certainly be very easy for LL to do, and one of those ‘niceties’ that might persuade people not to abandon LL and try out ‘NeXT Life’ instead — because the competition will force you to sell all your L$ and buy their currency instead. Keeping the L$ in both SL and ‘NeXT Life’ would also mean no hiccups on the LindeX, and no need to fear a market crash. It would be a wise decision.

Of course, then there is the issue about land. Not all residents have land, but those who have, have spent tens of thousands of US dollars in tier. Some might be happy if LL gave them an equivalent plot and transferred all objects to it — converting prims and sculpties to mesh — even if it meant that no scripts would be transferred. Again, this is a psychological thing. If LL can create a virtual environment which starts with everybody’s homes, even if crippled; everybody using their old avatars, even if their animation overriders don’t work; keep their money; and continue to see their friends and groups in-world, well then… the switch would not be so terrible to endure. You’d still lose a lot during the transition — but far less than what would happen when joining HF or Facebook. In fact, that’s precisely the problem that OpenSimulator grid owners also face: many residents are reluctant to switch to OpenSimulator because it means losing everything. And even if you’ve joined one grid, that grid might fail — or all your friends might have moved to a different grid — and that means starting over and over again from scratch. That’s the reason why OpenSimulator grids have been around for 7 years or so, but still failed to attract more than a few dozen thousands of users, and grow very, very slowly (even though their combined landmass is nowadays bigger than the SL Grid).

This is naturally speculative. LL has not said anything about how the ‘land’ business will work. Since they have stated that nothing is open source, that means that at least it will be LL hosting all content in exclusivity. But will there be ‘land’ and monthly fees, or something completely different? Some vague rumours have suggested that LL might be switching over to a business model more similar to Kitely’s. But all this is wild speculation. The truth is that we don’t know, and, as such, it’s safer to assume that there will be no way you’ll get any land on the new virtual world ‘NeXT Life’.

Still, to recap, Linden Lab has an edge over the competition when pushing SL residents into ‘NeXT Life’. Unlike their competitors, they can:

  • Keep their identity (avatar name, password, etc.) and continue to ensure their privacy
  • Keep their lists of friends and groups
  • Keep their Linden dollars
  • Keep their textures, notecards, and sound clips
  • Partially allow some content to be migrated
  • At least temporarily, allow their avatar and most clothes to be migrated
  • If the land model works similar to SL’s, then they might allow something equivalent to be migrated as well (and get residents to resume payments for tier on the new environment)

It sounds far less bleak than ‘starting from scratch’! None of the competitors can offer as much, except that they can promise that your Facebook friends will be easy to find. HF is committed to privacy, so very likely you won’t even be seeing your Facebook/Twitter/Plurk friends… unless you explicitly allow them to see you.

Making Money

We get back to the business model again… what will be the business model for ‘NeXT Life’, and why should it be better for both LL and consumers and content creators?

HF’s business model, at this stage, is the one that is most clear, because Philip Rosedale was very open about it. By pushing the responsibility of hosting content to users, not to the company, it means that HF’s sole revenues will come from three main sources — identity certification/location services, marketplace fees, and cryptocurrency exchanges. All the rest is beyond HF. Their risk is only in betting that enough people are willing to pay those fees for them to stick around for a long while. But because they have a freakish development model, it also means they can survive with far fewer human resources. And because they will not be content hosters, it means they won’t have to worry about the infrastructure for running the virtual world (users will provide that infrastructure), thus saving huge costs. However, it means that they are relying upon users to provide high-quality service for others to enjoy. This might happen or not. If everybody in HF only has crude access to the Internet and underpowered computers, then the HF virtual world will look terrible — and HF will fail, but not because of their fault! What Rosedale needs to do right now is to establish some agreements with organisations and companies that will host some servers right from the start, or everything will collapse before it even starts. The beauty of the system is that it will allow very different ‘land baroning’ models to co-exist and compete among themselves in search of users. In fact, every kind of service currently existing in SL — from music venue hosts, DJs and live players (HF has been developing quite a lot of audio-related things), to red-light districts, to vast communities subletting land — will be not only possible in HF, but, free from any constraints existing in SL (ToS, prim limits, avatar limits, and so forth), they might be far better. Or at least far different. I can imagine that if HF is a success there will be many, many competing business models around the same services, all eagerly experimenting with the way to attract more users (and paying customers!). In a sense, HF has the potential of being a much more advanced enabler of a social-economic environment — with far wider diversity — than Second Life ever was. Obviously, there is a big if. People really have to be sold to Philip’s idea of how a metaverse will work. For many residents, for example, the notion that there is no ‘appeal’ to HF from scammers and bad business practices might be a deterrent. There won’t be abuse reports or anything like that; each server connected to the HF Metaverse will deal with visitors of their slice of the virtual world under their own terms. While this is exactly how the World-Wide Web works, for old SL veterans it might be a too dramatic change. And it remains to be seen if HF attracts anyone outside the SL/OpenSimulator community to make a difference.

Facebook’s content hosting will very likely be mostly for free or subscription-based, e.g., anyone might start with a parcel or place, but if you want more — or if you want to get listed, place ads, etc. for people to be able to visit your parcel — then there will be ‘upgrade’ costs. This would be consistent with Facebook’s pricing structure. Thus, content creators will make money, but it’s likely that all ‘land’ management will be a Facebook monopoly. Obviously, some people will very likely sublet their parcels, but we will need to see how the whole virtual world works to be able to speculate about business opportunities there. One thing is for certain: content creators will have a Marketplace and be able to offer virtual goods there. And because Facebook is full control of the environment, it will be very ‘tamed’. Anything outside very strict rules will not be tolerated; Facebook can kick out millions of users every day, just because they have a billion users happily logging in.

About ‘NeXT Life’ we know almost nothing.

Because that virtual world is under full control of Linden Lab, we can expect it to be more similar to Second Life: there will be loose guidelines — as we have in SL now — but a lot of things will continue to be forbidden. Although nobody knows how the land model will work, it’s expectable that they will have ‘wholesale retailers’ (the ‘land barons’ of today) because it’s more manageable for LL that way. Because at this stage LL is not worried about kids in the virtual world anymore, it’s conceivable that we will continue to have adult content and services. There might be added privacy, to levels that SL cannot provide (because it was never designed that way) — e. g. no need for skyboxes, nobody will be able to enter or look inside your home if you don’t allow them. So, in a sense, there will be more ‘familiarity’ — it’s the same old company with their same old moods but providing the same old service overall. The difference might be a focus on content creation, which will make at least the early adopters very happy. However, the virtual world cannot survive on content creators alone. It needs a massive number of consumers to make the content creators happy, too. And that’s the catch: because LL will have to persuade the ‘average resident’ of SL that it’s far better to go to ‘NeXT Life’, where everything will be familiar — only much, much better! — than to simply disappear to HF or Facebook and never come back again. And here I can only see the arguments I’ve listed before — and even I am skeptic that they will be enough.

Yes, the world is ending

Let’s fast-forward to two alternative universes.

On the first alternative universe, LL has given up ‘NeXT Life’. They toyed with the idea for a while, scaring everybody, but reluctantly let it drop, and focus solely on SL.

At some point in time, HF will be good enough for early adopters to use (right now, unless you are a compilation guru, it won’t be easy to even join). They will have to struggle with a psychological barrier: that in HF the world is truly in the hands (or, rather, the computers) of its users, and that HF is not providing more than the ‘glue’ that holds it all together. While certainly thousands of eager SL residents will try it out — some never to return! — the common, average resident will not. They have seen OpenSimulator and similar experiences, and they are ‘strange’ enough for them. SL is familiar. HF is too wacko — it puts too much power into individual hands. Sure, it will be cool for geeks, but will it appeal to a massive number of non-geek users? Probably not. It will take time for organisations and companies to start running sections of the HF virtual world and provide the kind of ‘familiar’ services we have on SL today — community management, dealing with land issues, abuse reports, technical support, etc. It will take a while before we go from the early adopters to the stage that we get ‘early adopter organisations/companies’. In the meantime, HF will be burning investor money all the time.

So all will depend on if HF is lucky. Or if they’re bought. But the average SL resident will stick to SL.

Then FaceWorld is launched. Many SL residents are wary of Facebook’s policies. No adult content? Hmm. No privacy? No way to opt-out? All my data is being sent for profiling? All my content will be owned by Facebook? Hmm. Many will try it out, but find it ‘mostly empty’ — except with endless hordes of avatars desperately looking for some content. Again, content creators might be enthusiastic about working side-by-side with legends like John Carmack, but the regular SL resident will have to look hard — and wait long — until they find anything that captures their attention. And it will be much easier to chat with their Facebook friends on 2D text chat, outside the virtual world… or on Skype. Why bother to get an avatar to interact with others?

Still, because Facebook has unlimited funds, they can hold on for years, and wait for content to magically appear.

So, ultimately, on this scenario, Linden Lab would have nothing to worry. Neither HF nor Facebook will ‘steal’ a significant amount of their users. Obviously, a few thousands would be lost, that would be inevitable. But sooner or later they would return, at least some of them. When Blue Mars collapsed, we started to see familiar faces again. When Cloud Party shut down, old friends started to pop up once more on our friends list. The same would happen with HF and Facebook. LL might see a further erosion of their revenues once those worlds are launched, but not a significant one. To compete with HF, they could open source their server software, and allow current OpenSimulator grids to interconnect; there are so few users there anyway that it wouldn’t make the Lab any difference, and they would still be able to boast similar degrees of ‘freedom’ as HF can boast about — ‘you can do whatever you wish on your own mini-grid, under your own ToS, running on your own servers — but you’ll still be in Second Life!’.

Pretty much business as usual, and, in spite of the competition, SL would go well into its second decade of operation.

Now let’s switch to scenario 2.

Here, LL is nudging gently that residents should switch — not to the competition, but to their new (and incompatible) product. They offer little more than saying, ‘it has awesome possibilities, in terms of graphics, and it opens up content creation to a new level’. So what? Their competitors are doing exactly the same. So what would be the motivation to be in ‘NeXT Life’ instead of High Fidelity or FaceWorld?

What can LL offer future ‘NeXT Life’ residents more than the other two companies cannot?

For me, this is the fundamental question. It’s not about telling us residents that ‘NeXT Life’ will be much better and cooler and easier to use than Second Life. We all know that! But we also know that High Fidelity and Facebook’s VW will also be better, cooler, and appeal to content creators (possibly for different reasons) than Second Life. It’s no good even telling that ‘LL has been in business for a decade, we know better’. They have a terrible track record — one where almost every decision resulted in loss of revenue, and the major decision that actually increased the user base dramatically was… giving access away for free. Not good.

The LL we have now is not the LL of 2004. Almost everybody has gone. There is no doubt that the current batch of developers (and management!) are extremely competent professionals — perhaps even more so than before! However, it’s not ‘the same LL’. In fact, Facebook and High Fidelity have almost as many ‘original LL developers’ as LL has! There is not really a sense of ‘continuity’ — and even if there is, it’s not as if LL is the ‘coolest’ company out there. Facebook, of course, is intractable and impersonal. But High Fidelity is all hippy culture and much closer to the end users — in fact, right now, users and employees work together, side by side, to create their own world. LL could have done that long ago, when they started open-sourcing the viewer software, but, in spite of their frequent collaboration with third-party viewer developers, the truth is that there is a huge gap between both. There is no ‘user governance’ — residents have no saying in the future of SL. So none of these arguments are actually good for LL!

So, when facing the big choice — staying into a SL with an uncertain future, or moving to any of the other three platforms, what will residents do?

If they had no choice, then, sure, ‘NeXT Life’ would be the place to go. Many would escape to OpenSimulator, many more would simply give up, but ‘NeXT Life’, because it would be the only choice, would easily capture the majority of current residents. It would take some time to rebuild the complex society and economy we enjoy in SL from scratch, but, not having a choice, what would people do otherwise?

But because there will be choices — possibly even better choices — LL has now a huge problem to face.

They need to have good arguments for pushing people out of SL and into ‘NeXT Life’. So far, the only arguments they have given are exactly the same that the competition has given. That’s not enough; not by far.

LL has 18 months or so to carefully prepare their sales pitch. If, as I suspect, they completely ignore the competition, and blindingly follow their ungrounded belief that ‘everybody will want to go to NeXT Life’, then what will happen is that they will just face a massive exodus from SL, as people realize they have to start from scratch. Not content creators; those will spread among the three new technologies and see where they can earn more money. Not early adopters; those thousands will also have accounts on all three technologies, and eagerly jump from one to another, just to be dazzled by the new and shiny. No, it’s the masses that are neither content creators not early adopters. Those will have no place left to go. They will stick to SL until LL, short of revenues, will have no choice but to shut it down — for purely economic reasons. But if they only managed to grab a few thousands — probably the same thousands that will be on HF and Facebook as well — and these few thousands do not generate enough revenue to sustain ‘NeXT Life’, then what?

In two years or so, Linden Lab might have to face the dilemma that they have just shot down their cash cow, but their replacement is not enough to sustain them. Then it’s not merely about continuing to sustain one or the other virtual world, as they have announced. It’s about the ability to sustain the company. They might not be able to survive at all as Linden Lab.

And this is what they’re gambling with now. They’re staking their reputation and their company on the belief that people will eagerly jump to their new platform, abandoning all they have done in the past decade, and that this will generate enough revenue to sustain at least the new platform. Well, fortune favours the bold, they say, but in business there is also the notion of ‘unnecessary risk’. Unless, of course, that LL is so desperate that they have no choices left — but this is something that goes contrary to what we know about LL: they have managed to sustain their revenue streams from different sources, compensating for the loss of revenue in SL.

So, for me, more important than dazzling us all with ultra-cool new tech, which will definitely appeal to some (I’m certainly one of those!), I believe that Linden Lab should be doing some deep thinking about what real arguments they have for the majority of residents to switch over and continue to spend money in their new platform as they have done so far in Second Life. This means presenting a clear migration path. No matter how much content will be lost forever, it’s the ability to provide this migration path that sets Linden Lab apart from their competitors: neither High Fidelity, nor Facebook, can offer that.

I have given some suggestions on what the ‘migration path’ could entail. Those are arguments that can be given at the moment ‘NeXT Life’ is launched and they have to ask themselves, ‘should I stay or should I go?’ These need to be well presented and quite clear. Or else people, without any reason to ‘stay’, will ‘go’ — to the competition.

I have read in many places how LL is, to a degree, trying to emulate what Steve Jobs did at Apple. When Apple was desperate, Jobs pitted one department against the other — the brand-new Macintosh team against the ‘old’ Apple team. Both struggled hard to win the hearts — and the wallets! — of the users. At the end, the shiny tech, represented by the Macintosh, won. Why? There was a clear migration path. The original Mac could run the old Apple applications. And every time Jobs announced a huge change — from OS 9 to OS X; from PowerPC to Intel — the fanbase trembled and cried out loud in despair. What was Jobs answer? Show them a clear migration path, always a clear migration path. Microsoft didn’t fare so well when trying to push people to ‘abandon’ Windows XP — they simply didn’t have any good arguments to switch over (XP’s last incarnation was stable, fast, easy to use, and relatively free from virus, if well-maintained — why switch to Vista, which had none of that?).

In terms of internal business strategy, it’s not a bad idea to pit ‘Second Life’ against ‘NeXT Life’. But the ‘NeXT Life’ team has to learn the lesson from Apple in order to succeed. It’s not enough to dazzle customers with shiny new tech. Sure, early adopters and fans will always come over. What really matters, however, is how the migration path is handled.

That doesn’t mean that everything should be migrated; it might be a technological impossibility. But at least some things, the ones I’ve pointed out, can be migrated. And by doing that tiny little bit of effort, Linden Lab will at least tell its common residents that there is a place for them waiting on ‘NeXT Life’. There might be a lot of inventory missing, but it’s better than the alternative: remember, on HF or Facebook, nobody will know your name, nobody will recognise your avatar, you won’t have any money, and your inventory will be empty. On our platform at least we’ll keep those things for you.

And I conclude with a final suggestion. Linden Lab, please sit together with the top content creators in Second Life; you know who they are. Tell them how awesome ‘NeXT Life’ will be. Then hire them — yes, pay them money — to convert a substantial part of their content to ‘NeXT Life’. In return, they will ‘allow’ residents switching over to pick brand new copies of their content, for free, in exchange for the equivalent content they had in Second Life. This would save all the costs of planning to migrate content. Let the content creators do that for you — probably what you’d spend would be about the same. Mesh content creators only need to re-upload their existing meshes and tweak the parameters to work correctly with ‘NeXT Life’. This takes a lot of time, which they would be paid for by selling their content once again on ‘NeXT Life’. But if you pay for that work, they could allow people simply to get the new, advanced content for free. Not only the average resident would be happier; content creators would be faithful for life to you!

In 18 months, a lot of content could be converted that way. It would mean that at least much of the best content would not only already be in place in ‘NeXT Life’ for future shoppers, but existing residents would be able to at least exchange some of their old SL content for brand new ‘NeXT Life’ content — and not feel completely lost, and naked (literally so!).

Think about it. Your competition could never pull that off to attract disgruntled SL users. But you can.

Make it so.


Note: Of course I have no idea how LL’s product will be called2. I’ve used the fictional NeXT Life name, which is an obscure reference for anyone who never bought an Apple computer in the 1980s. In 1985, during a power struggle at Apple, Steve Jobs resigned, and founded a new company, using radical ideas that he wanted to introduce on the (then) brand-new Macintosh, but was prevented to do so. His new company was called NeXT — but because Jobs retained shares at Apple, it was amusingly known as ‘Jobs’ other company’ for a long time. Eventually, Apple bought NeXT in 1996, Jobs went back to work at Apple, and the core of the NeXT operating system became eventually what is known as Mac OS X today.

The NeXT workstation was rather innovative for its time. One cool feature it had was that it emulated PostScript for everything — the whole screen was PostScript — and this means that it could drive a laser printer directly (for similar reasons, Mac OS X started by emulating PDF for everything). Thus, instead of selling high-end laser printers (which had to include a full-blown PostScript interpreter running inside what to all purposes a complete computer — something which was very costly!), Jobs sold with the NeXT workstation a very cheap high-quality laser printer, and let the workstation do all the work of rendering the page. I was privileged to have such a workstation with Digital Print at one of my former companies. The NeXT workstation ran the accounting application, and I will always remember doing a night shift all alone, being barely awake, when suddenly, in the early hours of morning, I jumped up when an unknown female voice very clearly (and loudly) proclaimed: ‘The printer is out of paper’. I think my heart stopped for a few seconds until I realised that the NeXT workstation was speaking! Not the usual synthetic voices we had in the 1990s, but something which was 20 years ahead of its time, and utterly realistic in those days…

One NeXT workstation became famous, because the World-Wide Web was invented by Tim Berners-Lee on it. The first web server ran on that workstation. Later, the first graphical WWW browser was developed on a NeXT. Because of all that, ‘NeXT’ stands in my mind as a symbol of innovation way ahead of its time.

Ironically, High Fidelity is Philip Rosedale’s ‘other company’ too. Not unlike Jobs in the 1980s, Rosedale has been pushed out of Linden Lab, and now founded his own company, with his own vision for how a virtual world should be — a radically different one from Second Life. It would be even more ironical that, before LL’s new product is out, LL agrees to buy High Fidelity, absorbs their product, and merges the code with their own solution. What would the resulting product be called? Why, ‘NeXT Life’, of course 🙂 Rosedale is an Apple fan, too, and I’m sure he must have been toyed with NeXT workstations when he was younger…

Still, any name is better than ‘Second Life Two’. The designation Second Life: The New Generation has also been popped around, but I don’t think you can call a virtual world that. ‘Third Life’ would be obnoxious and makes no sense. It’s possible that Linden Lab revives the old ‘LindenWorld’ name (how SL was called in the early alpha), but I personally hope that they pick a much better name. Until that is revealed, I’ll be gladly calling it NeXT Life, until someone stops me from doing do 🙂


Further notes after a review made in 2023-03-28:

  1. Back in 2014, we only knew that Zuckerberg wanted to do a virtual world, after he had bought Oculus for an absurd amount of money; while not yet universally available at the time I write this note, the product is actually called Horizon Worlds.
  2. This is one of my rare predictions that became true, although it wasn’t really hard to predict its failure; all the signs were there. Linden Lab’s product was called Sansar (keeping their tradition of using Sanskrit names for worlds…), and after a few years, they sold it to Wookey Project Corp. which still maintains it at the time of writing (i.e., 2023). All developers previously assigned to the Sansar project came back to Second Life, which got a sudden boost in terms of rendering quality; these days, the ultra-realistic avatars we can see on promotional videos of Sansar do not impress us Second Life residents any longer. Even ‘fast frame-per-second rates’ are a thing of the past; modern computers (or old ones with extraordinary graphic cards) will easily render super-smoothly at 40-50 FPS, even on laggy regions. The main differences between Second Life and Sansar today are mostly that Second Life is a visually contiguous virtual world (Sansar has, instead, closed ‘experiences’, independent of each other and visitable through the equivalent of a teleport) and does not support VR goggles directly (it used to be simple during a few months or even years, as VR support was built-in on the viewer for a while, but the interface is not designed for VR… the legacy of that technology is today the ability to take 360º snapshots). Nevertheless, the recent announcements of a ‘mobile version’ of Second Life by Linden Lab themselves, and the continuing independently developed third-party viewer using the Unity Engine, show that there might soon be a new generation of devices able to run Second Life, possibly even ‘true’ VR, as the mobile version of SL is designed to rely upon gestures, not point-and-click and keyboard commands — a first step towards the construction of a truly immersive environment (as Zuckerberg calls it). Last but not least, the Puppetry development team are essentially replicating (with external, do-it-yourself plugins!) the ability to drive an avatar’s gestures and face expression, using a webcam connected to the computer running SL — just like Snapchat and other popular tools (allegedly including Horizon Worlds…) have been offering for a while.

And more further reviews, made in 2024-02-05:

  1. Aye, exactly as Kevin O’Leary predicted, that crazy ‘Postcard on the run’ company failed — no surprises there. What’s interesting is that the concept seems to have been picked by others. Well, back in 2014, there were others already doing the same.
  2. Linden Lab’s own Unity-based mobile application for Android and iOS is not vaporware — at the time of writing, it’s being extensively tested (in closed alpha, just for Premium Pro residents), and the preliminary reports (as far as the alpha-testers are allowed to report) are that “it works”, however, with many limitations (as would be expected). Allegedly, navigation is harder than expected, and there is no inventory (just the Outfits); IMs had been just introduced, the last time I checked the news. Anyway, the point here is that Linden Lab clearly went for scenario #1, as said, even though they clearly wished to have released the mobile version for their 20th anniversary. According to what I read, it will take a few more months of development until it can be released to the public in general. But it’s getting there. Will it be a game-changer? Perhaps, if it runs on the Apple Vision Pro — a product we were not even aware of last year, much less a decade ago.
  3. Inara Pey called to my attention in the comments that I had wrongly understood her article (she’s right), and, worse than that, quoted her out of context. My apologies to Inara, and hopefully the rewriting set things right this time!
  4. Hackers have added one of their links in the middle of the text, without my noticing. I have no idea for how long it has been there!
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