Have sim, will travel

Virtual world specialist and all-around clever guy, John “Pathfinder” Lester, explores the possibility of putting a virtual world server and sims on a single USB drive.

I had heard about some clever folks who figured out how to install and run OpenSim on a USB key.  You can also install and run a viewer like Imprudence on a USB key.  Which means you could walk up to your friend’s PC, stick your USB key into it, run a few programs on the key, and suddenly be in your own personal virtual world. [Link: A Virtual World in my Hands: Running OpenSim and Imprudence on a USB Key]

Pathfinder describes how he uses the OpenSim server combined with the Imprudence viewer, which allows you to copy your own content from Second Life then import it into your OpenSim grid instance.

Unfortunately, the key phrase is “your own content”: anything that you attempt to export using Imprudence must be 100% attributed to the account doing the exporting. This means that if you used an alternate account for some of the work, as I often do, your own creations are stuck in Second Life. If you have mixed creator tags on anything you export, even if you’re the actual creator of that object and even if you own the copyright on all aspects of the work, you can actually be permanently banned from Second Life without appeal, due to restrictions in the Second Life Terms of Service. While I recognize the need to protect copyright and Linden Lab’s need to protect their butts legally, I would be saddened to lose control of my own content (or get banned) due to a technicality.

All the same, I think I might try Pathfinder’s technique on some simpler items. Maybe I can retain at least a few mementos of my Second Life years for the future.

Bad Poetry of Second Life, Part 3

Welcome to PAIN. Muahahaha! This, of course, is part three of a too-many-part series of actual stinky poetry written by Second Lifers (see part 1 and part 2).

Back in late 2003 and early 2004, I hosted several poetry contests. The challenge: in only 15 minutes, and given eight random words to include, write a poem that’s so awful, your eyes bleed from the reading of it.

In today’s installment, we turn the wayback machine to November 4, 2003. The random words: deposit, dolly, erogenous, flipper, giggle, sublime, slimy, and tapestry. Continue reading “Bad Poetry of Second Life, Part 3”

Bad Poetry of Second Life, Part 2

As I mentioned in my previous post, in late 2003 and early 2004, I hosted a series of poetry contests in Second Life. The challenge: to write the absolute worst poem possible in fifteen minutes, while incorporating eight randomly-chosen words. The virtual poets rose to the challenge, and the results would nauseate even a Vogon.

Seven years later, I am revisiting selections of vile verse and posting them here for your reading discomfort. You may recognize some names.

This selection of stinky stanza are dredged up from the evening of October 28, 2003. The random words of the day: boat, strangulate, hearse, pasty, hat, carp, and recline. Continue reading “Bad Poetry of Second Life, Part 2”

Bad Poetry of Second Life, Part 1

In late 2003 and early 2004, I hosted a series of poetry contests in Second Life. The challenge: to write the absolute worst poem possible in fifteen minutes, while incorporating eight randomly-chosen words. The virtual poets rose to the challenge, and the results would nauseate even a Vogon.

Seven years later, I plan to revisit selections of vile verse and post them here for your reading discomfort. You may recognize some names.

The first selection comes from October 21, 2003, where a handful of avatars gathered at Theatre Terra in Natoma. Random words: balaclava, dainty, eulogy, glimpse, herculean (or Hercules), kayak, massage, and yodel. Time: 15 minutes.

Kenzington Fairlight:

i don’t know what balaclava is/just that it’s said in aladin
the genie says it in a song/as you glimpse at his powers flashin!
after the scene, i massage my brain/he made dainty chics dance around!
this movie was so much better than hercules/my brain yodels, it does astound!
it makes me want to take my kayak/and paddle it through some sand
but i figured out that this can’t work/lola, isn’t this eulogy grand?

Lordfly Digeridoo:

Sitting on the steps wearing my balaclava,
Chewing this piece of gum that just lost its flava.

I yodel for a massage, but it just ain’t comin,
The old lady’s yelling at me, and my ears are numbin.

I stretch my arms, bored as a bat,
I decide to see if I can find this or that.

I go inside the crib, to catch me the paper,
And I glimpse a eulogy next to the latest caper.

It was a tribute to Hercules, our fallen hero,
The courageous peasant who worked his way from zero.

He was taking a daintly cruise down the Mighty Mississippi,
In a kayak of all things, and the weather was getting iffy.

Things as always took a turn for the worse,
He got nailed by lightning, and was taken away by a hearse.

His family was distraught, and so was the town,
The widow was dressed in an all-black gown.

I guess it happened yesterday according to the news,
I wondered why my neighbors were crying the blues.

So now I sit here, still bored outta my mind,
with my old lady, who’s robbing me blind.

I guess that’s how it goes, deep in the hood,
And with any luck, this poem won’t be any good.

Julian Fate:

O, dainty muse I do beseech
And sing thy vapid eulogy,
Massage mine brain to fervid heights
Of herculean poetry.
Inspire me that my words might glimpse
The heights and ever mixed verb tense.
Guide my kayak of sweet verse
Across the literary univere.
O, Muse whose creative balaclava
Covers o’er like molten lava
Let not Death’s rudeness crack my voice
But yodel sweetly, that’s my choice.

Neferon ________:

A man named Turger.

I feel as if a dainty… fainty slip of the spoon urged my kayak to capsize with unknow stuff.
That is also why my balaclava is so huff and puff.
The yodel i do is different then the need for eulogy.
And it is not a glimpse of phsycotherapy.
No no no none of these herculean words is mine, yet you need to heed thyself from the sheep, for it massages quickly.
And of course the fox is cunning and trickly.
Repeat is handy when doing things.
and repeat is handy when it comes to springs.
Repeat is handy when doing things.
and repeat is handy when it comes to springs.
The fly eat a hamburger because it does not eat a cheeseburger.
Music stops and ends when … o no the beat is hard and like a rhino very fast.
I once knew a man named Turger.
And he didn’t last…..very long

Stay tuned for more bad poetry from the oldbies of Second Life.

Seven years in Tibet. I mean SL.

Maybe this is a little early, I don’t know, but each year around the start of September, I like to mark the anniversary of my initiation into Second Life with a little retrospective of my years in the metaverse. Sometime in the next couple of weeks (I can’t remember the specific date), my account turns seven. That’s right, since September 2003, I’ve been rezzing, cutting, sizing, tilting, tapering, twisting, hollowing, dimpling, rotating, moving, linking, and texturing. As a result, I have an inventory full of hundreds — if not thousands — of virtual objects by Cubey Terra. Some became the products that you find at Abbotts Aerodrome, some became Abbotts Aerodrome itself, but most sit unfinished and mostly forgotten in the mess that is my Inventory. Continue reading “Seven years in Tibet. I mean SL.”