Media
Looking for Venus
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Thu, 10/25/2007 - 09:08It was a beautiful evening for convergence, all the planets seemed to be aligned just right. I was sitting in front of the TV with my laptop fired up. I was using the new OnRez client to explore Second Life as I watched CSI: NY. All of my old tools from the regular Second Life client were working fine. I was speaking with an old friend whom I've recently convinced to enter Second Life. He was stumbling through orientation and had added me as a friend. We were talking about capital markets in Second Life and I have him some seed money to get started.
I had my TwitterBox Heads Up Display (HUD), attached, so I could see the messages that my friends were posting on Twitter and I could post my own messages in reply. I watched the TV, the IM with my friend, the twitter messages and the discussions going on around me in Second Life.
I had teleported into the CSI area of Second Life. They had their own orientation to help people get started and guides were standing around making sure that people were finding their way around appropriately. Twice, while I was distracted by one of the other media streams coming at me, I was asked by the guides if I was having problems. This led to several great side discussions.
Over on Twitter, friends were talking about how bad CSI was. There were just too many things that were unrealistic. For the diehard Second Lifer, it lacked verisimilitude. People commented about how there were so many things that CSI showed in Second Life that you just couldn't do. Second Life just isn't that exciting people commented and they wondered why there was a need for that much embellishment.
Well, first life isn't always all that exciting either, and we've gotten used to television embellishing first life, so why not Second Life. I mean, after all, this is fiction. We are expected to come with some willingness to suspend disbelief. I must admit, I watch very little television. Before we moved, the TV was next to my computer, so I would watch a little of some of the prime time shows. But now, the TV is in a different room and I have to make an effort to watch TV, and rarely is it worth the effort.
Last night, I took my laptop into the living room and watched CSI. It is a show that I would normally be unlikely to watch even if the TV was still next to my computer. I just don't like the blood and gore. So, as I settled onto the couch, I didn't have very high expectations. How well will CSI portray Second Life and the people involved. They did a lot better than I expected.
They started off with the victim dressed up as her Second Life avatar. Cosplay, one of the characters described it as. People in Second Life will sometimes dress up as their avatar when they meet other people from Second Life. I know that my daughters' anime loving characters sometimes participate in Cosplay at anime conventions. I've met people from other virtual worlds at gatherings, and while one of them cross dressed for a New Year's eve party, I never saw any virtual world cosplay. But, I haven't been to any Second Life gatherings in real life, so I can't judge whether or not it was accurate. In my mind, it passed the verisimilitude test and added nicely to the story.
Then, there was the first suspect. A kid with advanced Multiple Sclerosis who could be a Don Juan in Second Life. He was supposed to meet the first victim where she was killed, but chickened out. He had bought a gun to kill himself when the disease progressed too far. This played on many stereotypes of Second Life characters. Those that can't make it in regular life, because they are losers, have some ailment, or some combination of the two. I don't like to promote stereotypes. While there are people like that in Second Life, there is also a wonderful diversity. Yet there is a reason for sterotypes. They can describe a subset of a population, and in this case, I've known too many people that fit the stereotype that CSI employed. Again, passing the verisimilitude test and adding nicely to the story.
Later, they introduced the concept a griefer, someone that causes grief to other people in Second Life. If they were teaching a social sciences course on the nature of characters in Second Life, they would have gotten a poor grade on this. Yet that's not what they were doing. They were providing entertainment and their dealing with the griefer was passable. The same applied to the virus that the detective picked up in Second Life, shutting down all his computers. They embellished that part much further than can really happen with the technology, but as a story telling device it worked fairly well.
The show was predictable. It was inaccurate about Second Life, and friends who are concerned about this are likely to hate what CSI did. Yet from my perspective, it was entertaining, which was its primary goal. The predictability and inaccuracies were less than I expected and so it exceeded my expectations and was enjoyable. I'm currently planning to watch the next episode.
OnRez on CSI: NY
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Wed, 10/24/2007 - 19:54This evening, millions of viewers will watch CSI: NY and be invited to solve a mystery in Second Life. Many will click on the CSI: New York Virtual Experience web site, set up an avatar, download the OnRez viewer and enter Second Life. How well will the grid handle the influx? We can only wait and see.
How good is the new OnRez Second Life Viewer? Well, you can download that now and start playing with. I did, and here is what I found.
It appears to be based very closely on the current Second Life viewer. The keystrokes all seem pretty much the same. You can even go into debug mode by press Ctrl-Alt-D and turn on and off the all the extra images with Ctrl-Alt-F1. This is exactly the sort of thing that Electric Sheep hopes the standard newbie in Second Life doesn’t do. It will confuse them horribly.
Yet Electric Sheep has done a great job with the new viewer. In the lower right hand corner, there is a friends button that makes communicating with your friends in Second Life much more like communicating with your friends via other instant messenger programs. They’ve added a nice navigation bar, similar to web browers to go to your home page, or in Second Life, your home region, as well as forward and back buttons to go to places you have recently teleported. They’ve added the section for ‘My Stuff’, ‘Shop’ and ‘Buy L$’. This should make the Second Life shopping experience easier and more pleasant for the casual user, so who knows, it just might help the Second Life economy after all.
Connecting via OnRez also brought up a box for CSI: NY. ‘Happening Now’ the message reads and encourages me to make sure that I’ve visited the White Rabbit crime scene and completed the orientation experience. It also provides links to crime scenes and of course shopping malls. Monkey Canning is offline right now, but I’m sure that when he gets a look at this, he’ll be trying to find some angle to get all these new Second Lifers to stop by at the Virtual Stock Exchange and by some Atlas Venture Capital stock or perhaps pick up some shares of Dawes Financial Corp or Springboard Publications currently in IPO.
It actually makes a lot of sense. Given the failed banks and corporations in Second Life, the allegations of fraud and so on, I’m sure CSI: NY could have a great episode about people hunting down notorious financial avatars like Jasper Tizzy.
So, for the casual user, it makes the experience much more enjoyable, without detracting seriously from the experience of the frequent user. For the hardcore geeks, there are some interesting tidbits. First off, the OnRez client appears to be based very closely on the traditional Second Life client, perhaps a little too closely. When I tried to install OnRez while I was in Second Life, it told me that OnRez was already running. When I shut down my traditional Second Life client, the OnRez installation resumed.
I’m running OnRez on an old Laptop running Windows 2000. It runs fine, although it requested that I load DirectX 9 and Quicktime 7.1. I have older versions of both which work fine for me, and I’ve been having difficulties getting DirectX 9 or Quicktime 7.1 for Windows 2000.
With OnRez up and running, I decided it was time for the next level of testing. Could I connet the OnRez viewer to an OpenSim? Fortunately, I have an OpenSim Grid running on my home network, so I fired up OpenSim with the –loginuri paramenter and sure enough, there was my OpenSim avatar in my OpenSim grid, ready for me to move it around.
I decided to push the envelope a little further. Could I run OnRez connected to the OpenSim grid and the traditional Second Life viewer connected to the Second Life main grid? Sure enough, they ran nicely next to each other, at least for a little while. Next thing I knew, I hit a blue screen of death. So, you can do it, but if you’re running on a flaky old Windows 2000 based laptop, you might see some crashes.
When I started up OnRez again, it gave me a message about how the last time I had run OnRez, it had ended abnormally. It was essentially the same message I’ve see too many times from the Second Life client.
So, I’m running the OnRez client. I’m going to keep my eyes open to see how Second Life and CSI: NY get along. To paraphrase Rick Blaine, this could be the beginning of a beautiful friendship.
CSI: SL - Down the Rabbit Hole, BNT back up
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Wed, 10/24/2007 - 07:15Wednesday 10 PM ET/PT/SLT, “A woman's murder sends Mac into "Second Life," the internet-based virtual world to track down the killer in both the real and cyber world. TV14-V.”
This is expected to bring a whole new wave of people to Second Life. To prepare for this wave, the Electric Sheep Company is expected to release a new client for Second Life, the OnRez viewer, which people are already arguing the pros and cons of.
Over on the Second Life Educators mailing list, people are wringing their hands. “What's going to happen on Oct 24th … and shortly thereafter when the 100s of new sims come online? Is that a good day NOT to be teaching or building in SL?”
Prokofy Neva in The Future of Content: Watching the Detectives wonders what all the new residents will do to Second Life. They “may or may not contribute to the existing inworld economy as consumers or even producers. I'm betting they won't, and that the inworld economy will take a severe hit.“
Well, if they don’t consume or produce, how are they going to deal the inworld economy a severe hit? How will such a severe hit compare with the closing of gambling, the decline in real estate prices, the runs on the Second Life banks, or the turmoil in the Second Life capital markets? How will such a severe hit compare with people becoming more involved with alternative grids?
Maybe some people will stick around, rent or buy some land, invest in some stocks, or put some money in banks. Some might be simply feed the next fraud du jour, others might make some good investments.
How much of an impact will CSI: SL really make anyway? Depending on how close a game it is, a lot of people may still be busy watch the Rockies and the Red Sox fight it out.
A different person commented, “Terrific. This will get the vast TV audience an opportunity to get a taste of "stepping inside" the TV. Should be mind-changing.”
I’m the eternal optimist. I don’t think Second Life will take a serious hit, either in the grid or in the economy, and somewhere, someone will have a mind-changing experience, and we will all be better off for it.
Also relating to Second Life finances, AnCapEx is now up and running. This is IntLibber Brautigan’s new stock exchange. In terms of functionality, it appears to be using the same software as the Second Life Capital Exchange (SlCapEx). I’ve always liked the SlCapEx interface, and I especially like their webservices providing an easily processed feed of stock prices. It would be great to see other exchanges pick up this format.
Currently, the only stock available on SlCapEx is Brautigan & Tuck Holdings, (BNT). This includes the merged in Countless Galaxies (CGI) shares. It will be interesting to watch the initial trading. On top of that, AnCapEx is talking about adding options. This will be a nice feature, although I’m curious about how exercising options will work. Ideally, they will list options on other exchanges which will require the exchanges to adapt and facilitate transfers of stock, such as through the exercise of options, as stock lending or stock gifts, and so on. This will move the capital markets in Second Life forward in ways greater than any influx of CSI views is likely to damage.
An Open Letter to the West Lafayette High School Administration
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Thu, 10/18/2007 - 09:53A recent article about students receiving suspensions as a result of comments on Facebook has caught my attention. I have been following a similar case in Connecticut, where Avery Doninger wrote criticism of her school administration using derogatory language in a Livejournal post. She was barred from running for re-election to class office and her case is now pending before the U.S. Second Circuit of Appeals in New York. You can read details about the case in the Connecticut section of my blog, Orient Lodge.
While I am particularly concerned about the issues of freedom of speech, due process and equal protection, I am also very concerned about the pedagogical interests and the teachable moments. The reaction of the school administration in Burlington, CT provide a great example of what, as a member of the board of education from a neighboring town describes as an illustration of “what administrators ought not to do”.
Unfortunately, the article that I read is lacking on details, so it may be that you are acting much better, or much worse than the Lewis S Mills school administration.
The article starts off by stating that “A video posted on Facebook of two high school students fighting at West Lafayette High School, Ind., prompted suspensions earlier this week.” Suspending students has always seemed to me to be a very harsh punishment, one that should only be used as a last resort. The article doesn’t detail what led up to the suspensions. Were the students spoken with about how inappropriate it was to post the video on Facebook? Were other measures attempted to take this and find a teachable moment, or did the administration move directly to punishment?
Defending a suspension where pedagogical approaches to the issue were attempted first and where the message online can be construed to support illegal activities, such as the fight may have been, is much easier than an arbitrary suspension that many see as an effort to curtail students free speech.
This gets even more complicated when you look at Caitlyn Casseday’s statement to the press. While obscenities are not normally the best method of furthering critical discourse, to use the words of Avery Doninger, there is a very big difference between what one ought to say, and what one is permitted to say, and, at least based on the newspaper reports, the school administrators at West Lafayette High School seem to have made a similar mistake as those at Lewis S Mills High School in Burlington, CT in differentiating between the two.
The article goes on to say that “A code of conduct, posted on the school district's Web site, does not directly address postings on the Internet, but does say existing rules about conduct apply both on and off school grounds.” Yet this seems to run counter to the famous Tinker v. Des Moines decision with the famous line, “It can hardly be argued that either students or teachers shed their constitutional rights to freedom of speech or expression at the school-house gate”
The article ends by noting that “Students are calling for this Friday to be ‘Free Speech Friday,’ and they are planning to wear white T-shirts in support of the suspended students.”
Part of the legal issues that the Lewis S. Mills school administration faces is their confiscation of T-shirts about free speech. Let us hope that the administration at West Lafayette High School doesn’t make a similar mistake.
A key standard in issues of students’ free speech revolve around whether the speech would substantially disrupt the pedagogical interests of the school. In the Lewis S Mills case, it appears as if it isn’t the students’ free speech that is substantially disrupting the pedagogical interests of the school, it is the reactions of the administrators. Let us hope that the administrators at West Lafayette High School can learn from the mistakes here in Connecticut.
So, if I were a school administrator in West Lafayette, what would I do? I would grab this teachable moment by the horns. I would have a school assembly where I addressed the issue head on. Ideally, I would schedule it for Friday and congratulate all the students that wore white T-shirts for struggling with what their rights really are.
I would bring in a constitutional lawyer to talk to the students about exactly what their rights are and make sure that they learn about cases like Tinker, Fraser, Hazelwood and Morse. I would also have someone trained in conflict resolution talk about how fighting is not a good way to resolve conflicts and putting a video of a fight online is not in the best interest of anyone. This could even set the stage for avoiding costly legal fights like we are seeing in Connecticut. I would have an English teacher speak about how to use language that is not offensive and even more effective in getting ones point across.
With all of that as groundwork, I would then invite the students to teach. It could be a valuable teachable moment. The other option, which also provides many valuable teachable moments, is watching the case spiral out of control as it works its way through our countries legal system.
I hope that you make wise decisions for your students.
Aldon Hynes
Stamford Advocate and the Danbury News-Times?
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Tue, 10/16/2007 - 15:20We all love to bash the traditional newspapers in Connecticut. It’s so easy to do and I know that many people here dislike the Stamford Advocate and the Greenwich Time almost as much as they dislike the Danbury News-Times and the Connecticut Post.
However, if reports in Editor and Publisher are correct, MediaNews Group, which owns the Danbury News-Times and the Connecticut Post is making a bid for the Stamford Advocate and the Greenwich Time. Will this result in more media consolidation? Will the Advocate and the Time end up with the same standards as the News-Times or the Post?
All the more need for people powered media.
(Cross posted to MyLeftNutmeg)