Talking Multi Engine

B-17 in Second Life
B-17 in Second Life

Check out today’s blog post “Talking Multi Engine” over at SL Airmenship. It’s an example of a nice innovation in Second Life flight physics — a simple idea, yet I can’t think of anyone using this idea in a multi-engine plane. Normally, thrust is applied in a central location and sometimes offset left or right as is needed. In this case, they apply force at the engines, rather than the centre axis, so no offset calculation is needed when engine thrust is imbalanced.

Lashings of virtual ginger beer

Not everything in Second Life is about the aircraft biz. While testing somebody’s version of my Stingray, I crashed on this tiny island in Okeanos and found a surprise. The Moles, Second Life’s infrastructure builders, installed a whimsical raft with barrels and mugs labelled “lashings of ginger beer”. So I helped my self to a mug and chilled out for a bit as the sun came up.

A relaxing moment in Second Life
A relaxing moment in Second Life

Fun details like this are why Second Life is so much fun to explore. Around the next corner there could be anything.

SL aircraft makers, let’s get back to basics

Warning: What follows is purely for a Second Life audience. All others, flee now while you still can.

I have an idea, but I’d like to introduce it by rewinding back to the start, where virtual flight began in Second Life.

When I first logged into Second Life in 2003, aircraft were rare things in the virtual sky. There was one airport on the grid — Gray Airfield — and it was populated with flight enthusiasts who struggled to create airplanes that flew at all realistically. Borrowing the words of Douglas Adams, they were almost, but not quite entirely, unlike planes.

Continue reading “SL aircraft makers, let’s get back to basics”

Is Second Life safe?

While meandering the time-sucking pages if Reddit, I found this question and video posted by Luca Grabacr, who noticed that when she Googled the phrase “is second life”, the top auto-complete option was “safe”. Is Second Life safe?

Second Life has been crippled by sensationalist articles written by outlets pushing juicy, sex-filled content as click-bait. But is that an accurate depiction of the popular online virtual world? Is Second Life safe?

Is the Internet safe? Is the web safe?

As Second Life is an open platform on the Internet with user-created content, you’d expect to see about the same proportion of “unsafe” to “safe” content that we see out on the web. Does that expectation match up to reality?

A very large portion of the web is devoted entirely to “adult content” websites (pornography, violence, gore, and other non-G-rated material), but do articles about the web usually lead with stories about the darker content, or do they lead with how useful the web is for communication, education, and commerce?

Linden Lab — the company that runs Second Life — exercises controls over what kind of content appears in Second Life through user-sourced reports. Users see adult or unsafe content outside of designated areas, and they send a report to Linden Lab with the expectation that Linden staff will remove the content and possibly suspend the culprit. In this way, Second Life ends up being more controlled than the rest of the Internet in general. Even regions rated with an A for “adult content” may or may not actually contain any unsafe material. The owners may simply want to restrict access to adults.

Given that the vast majority of Second Life content contains no nudity, sexual content, or explicit violence, why is Second Life’s legacy so tainted when the web’s reputation is largely positive?

Back when I started making stuff for Second Life, I told a friend about my work in the virtual world. He said —and I quote — “Isn’t that some kind of kinky sex simulator?” His only exposure to Second Life had been through articles that hunted down and inevitably found lascivious screen shots for their click-bait news sites. Sex sells, and flying with friends over a simulated ocean in a hot air balloon isn’t newsworthy. I get it.

That’s the legacy that Second Life users have to deal with now. I’ve spent over a decade making aircraft, parachutes, and various gadgets for Second Life. When I log in, it’s extremely unusual for me to see any adult content. Sure, if I looked for it, I’d find it, but then, what happens when you Google “nude”? See? Porn! The world wide web is more of a “kinky sex simulator” than Second Life.

Is Second Life safe? Well, it’s definitely safer than the rest of the Internet.