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Monday, May 21, 2012

Kev Sweetwater's Burn2 Memorial Service


Last week, the man behind the avatar Kev Sweetwater was found to have passed away in real life. Kev was best known for his role in Burn2, the team sent out a notice announcing his passing, and that they would be planning a memorial service on Saturday May 19th at 6PM. The event would be held at Deep Hole, and pictures of Kev were requested.

Arriving a little after 6PM on Saturday, the sim was full of people. At times there were more than fifty present. Most were of the Burn2 Community, but there were others. Kev was also a role-player at the Tombstone Wild-West RP, so many others from there were also present and paying their respects. Among those present was Dusty Udal, the former Dusty Linden. There was also Wizard Gynoid, artist Claudia222 Jewell, Dudarling Supermarine, Fearchar "Buck" Enoch, M2Danger Ranger, DollEyes Barbosa, Rails Bailey, whom I was told was one of the first Burners, and of course Gemma Cleanslate. Also there was Charlotte Martinsyde, whom had only recently partnered with Kev.

A tent had been set up for the occasion. With it's colorful top, it certainly didn't look like it was for a funeral. But underneath were various pictures of Kev Sweetwater, including a few of his real life self.

For almost two hours, people shared various stories about Dev. Je was described as having once made it to the Burning Man festival, which Burn2 is based on, which someone responded, "Another good lesson. Don't put off your bucket list more than necessary." Dusty Udal commented, "Well, I for one will never be able to make fresh eggnog without thinking of Kev. … We had an eggnog appreciation club going." They also joked about antics in Second Life involving using burn animations on oneself, and Kev using a fire extinguisher on them. One commented of a pinkish vehicle that looked vaguely like an open mouth, "Of all the things Kev built, the Clam Licker car is still my favorite." "I remember when he was building that thing, kept trying to run me over with it. Nothing quite like turning your camera and seeing that coming for you."

"(laughter) I was Away From Keyboard one night we were trying to set roads, and when I came back Kev had lowered the sim underwater, and left." "He asked me to have his babies, as a joke …" "I blasted him clear across the sim with a kamehameha." One cammed over to the memorial gallery, "I'm looking at this one pic and it's tearing me up, with the t-shirt saying 'NO MOAR PRIMZ 4YU!' " "I made that shirt for him, the front read 'Prim Dictator.' " "My first burn that I got to be a builder, Kev came over and was trying to join my parcel to an empty one. He was so tired, I think it took 3 cups of coffee before he got it." "The first time I met Kev, we talked for almost 6 hours. He could hold a conversation about anything, and always make it seem interesting."

"I won't ever forget the day he showed up in my box, telling me how much Charlotte meant to him, gushing, pouring out his soul." "That sounds like Kev." "I was captivated on how one man could express his being about Charlotte. That's when I knew he had found his love."

Emcee Widget, "So this guy walks into the DMV, and Gypsy and I are talking to everyone. We don't know anybody yet. We are talking about how DMV works and how we work together. And this guys like, 'Well this is pretty cool. I am an Okay builder, but I love to help people. I love Burning Man' he says. And I tell him, 'Find a team to work with.' And this guy starts working with everyone. This is how I met Kev."

Iskye Silverweb, "I knew Kev before BURN - at VWBPE, the first speaker at the conference needed to be introduced. And Phelan Corrimal was supposed to do the intro but wasn't there. I was that speaker's coach/helper/mentor, and so Gentle Heron said, if you do the intro, I'll voice (I'm deaf, so I only do text). And I was standing on the bridge kind of scared. And Kev in his little TV body stood on the other end of that bridge and IM'd to me, 'you can do it, go.' Gentle prompted and I thankfully finished the intro and got back off and Kev's 'good girl!' kind of surprised me but it was nice encouragement."

Katelin Rexen, "Even though he was a busy guy, he still was able to stop and talk say hello. And when I was sick and down in the dumps, when my physical pain was at it's worst, he would always try to cheer me up or ask how I was feeling. That was kind of guy he was, cared for his friends. … Kev, you will never be forgotten as so many here tonight remember the wonderful and caring man you truely were."
"This was nice. Thank you all for letting me stay a while … It's a very touching gathering. I never got to meet Kev, but I know he is well loved and missed …"

After the talk of Kev and some bacon jokes, someone got some virtual glasses of brandy, and passed them around, "… raising our glasses to Kev, cheers." "Cheers!" "He certainly gave of himself for all of us." "Yes, wherever you are now Kev, this is for you."

As 7:30 PM approached, people began taking places near the temple, which had been reconstructed for this special occasion, "I need to be up and close to toss Kev's Ranger hat in." "I never got this close to the other burns, and well, this one is special. So bolt me to the ground, please." "Please remove unnecessary HUDS and attachments." For a while, only the torchlike censers inside burned. Then white smoke was seen coming from the bottom, then the temple became ablaze. "It's beautiful, especially against the night sky." "I don't think I've seen a temple burn so beautiful and bright before now."


People were invited to leave messages in the temple, and many did, some including, "We will never forget you. You will always be part of our souls, part of our lives." "I'm sorry I took you for granted. I'm sorry I didn't thank you for all the work you do. I'm sorry I didn't tell you how special you are." "Kev I will miss seeing you in Amiville and at the SL Birthdays. Godspeed!" "Gone but not forgotten. You will always be part of us." "My darling husband, I love you, forever and always … Charlotte." As the the temple burned, the messages were released in poetic form.

Other messages were spoken by those attending as the flames lit up the memorial grounds, "Celebration of a life lived well in Second Life, and real life." "This is for you KEV!" "Yeah, burn for Kev!" "God bless you, Brother." "You will always be my Brother, Kev!" "May the road rise up to meet you. May the wind always be at your back. May the sun shine warm upon your face, and rains fall soft upon your fields. And until we meet again, may God hold you in the palm of His hand.""Rest in peace my friend, 'til we meet again!" "Go in peace and love, little brother. And save me a seat!" "God speed, you wacky son of a bitch." "Hope someone calls me that when I go." "Love you always, my darling."

Eventually, the fire began to burn itself out. And finally the flames were gone. There was only a few blackened timbers standing up, and burnt debris and ashes on the ground. "The best I've seen in Second Life." "Just Awesome." "This is a celebration of life! We can applaud this awesomeness!" "This is the latest I have been in Second Life in about four years." "Thank you so much whoever did this." "It was a wonderful tribute." "Awesome burn, go with the flames." "Good bye Kev, safe journey." "Thank you everyone for being here and making this happen. Don't take anyone for granted. If someone is special to you, tell them." "I'm sure Kev's in 3rd Life looking down on us and smiling."

Over time people gradually got up and left the sim, the number remaining becoming fewer and fewer, until all were gone. But the memories of what took place remained.

Anyone wishing to leave a message on Kev's account feed here: https://my.secondlife.com/kev.sweetwater . He also had a Flickr account: http://www.flickr.com/photos/59196052@N05/

"Nobody dies as long as they are remembered."

Bixyl Shuftan

Friday, May 18, 2012

Some Examples of Linden Labs' Ill Treatment to Those Who Do Second Life Good

It's no big secret most longtime users of Second Life have mixed feelings at best when it comes to Linden Lab. As a corporation, they can be downright cold and ham-handed at times when it comes to the treatment of their customers. Case in point was a few years ago in late October/November 2008 when the Lab pulled what many saw as a bait-and-switch with their raising Openspace tiers by 66 percent. The result was protests by residents big and small, among them Sarah Nerd, a businesswoman on the Grid as well as a blogger and one of Second Life's stronger supporters.

During the protests, Sarah got caught up in the moment and let a profanity slip into her words. The result was that she found herself suspended from logging into Second Life. That her estate business was about to take a major hit, or that Sarah was a model citizen who continually promoted Second Life mattered nothing.

"I was ashamed of myself. Not because I said f***, but because it was the realization that the game I love, had no love for me." Sarah Nerd would go out of business later that year.

About a year later, one of my friends, Foxyfurman Kumani,  had his own problems. When the community he lived in beforehand, Woodlin, began going downhill, he formed his own estate, Foxworth, and invited his neighbors over. Some months later, the Lindens targeted Foxworth, banning some customers and a real-life friend he invited to Second Life, accusing him of rigging traffic numbers, "why the hell attack me?" The accounts were never restored. The sim would continue to have some trouble with the Lab. Finally changes with the policy on Zyngo games, coming at the same time a major renter decided to move on, caused Foxworth to close down.

And recently there was trouble for a genius builder and scripter, as well as a good friend of mine: Alleara Snoodle.

Alleara Snoodle has been mentioned a few times from her work at the Chilbo area. But preferring to work behind the scenes, her work often goes understated or unrecognized. She has made a little money through building, but has worked for free on projects for friends, as well as the Relay for Life.

Usually very friendly, Alleara is more skeptical when is comes to Linden Lab. She once expressed a few opinions that sounded like she thought they could be lazy at times when it comes to problems on the Grid. But I never expected they would actually have a problem with her, considering all that she's done. That is, until a mutual friend told me she'd be off the Grid for a few days. She explained Linden Lab had suspended her account.

Alleara later got in touch with me through other means, "I got kicked out (logged out by Admin) and got an email that I cannot log in until Monday." She told me she was helping a friend making science-fiction shuttlecraft. But when they tried to put them up on Marketplace, bugs in the system kept that from happening, "We sent a lot of JIRA, but nothing happened."

Her persistence eventually got the attention of one of the Lindens, but not the way she hoped, "I was making him act, and he was not happy." The exchange got personal, and she ended up booted off Second Life, "I thought … he would at least react normally, but what can I say, his backyard. Every Linden can speak out a three day suspension at will with no paperwork."

Alleara told me in the past, there was someone in Linden Lab who helped her out, but that was no longer the case, "I have lost my supporter in the Lab, so this may happen from now on." Second Life Newser sent a notecard message to the Linden Alleara named as the one who suspended her. There was no answer.

After a few days, Alleara was back online, and busy with some project. Unlike Sara Nerd a few years ago, she had already learned not to be shocked at Linden Lab's ill will toward those who support Second Life.

Bixyl Shuftan

Friday, May 11, 2012

"Windows" by the Ballet Pixelle

I received a notice that the Ballet Pixelle was doing a performance of their original, ”Windows.” Since I had not been in a while I decided to go over to see it. The greeter met me and checked to see that I had received a playbill as I sat. The background of the stage was a city in the distance. The MC advised us that the performance was a three act play and the music should be set at the beginning of each act. The theme of this  ballet is stated as “Windows are openings that allow us to see a glimpse of a person's life; to be a bit of a voyeur for a moment in time.” 

As the first act opened we were looking through a window at a solo dancer who had just arrived home. Another window appeared with another dancer behind and then a third. Each dancer swayed and danced with passion as we watched and we wondered what each was thinking. Their moves are graceful as they twirl and pirouette, each in their own way. Act 2 took place in a diner as two teens seek to impress a handsome young man. Who won? I was not quite sure. Act 3 takes place in a lovely flower filled field with a young man and woman dancing their happiness in each other, as above an older couple watch and eventually become the dancers. 

The ballet is always enjoyable to watch. There is so much work put into their effort creating the moves and executing them. The stages are very well designed and pleasant to the eye. After the bows by all the performers they come and mingle with the audience offering autographed cards if you would like one. If you have not had the pleasure of seeing a ballet, try it. I admire all the work that goes into each ballet I have seen and look forward to the next one that I can get to see. 

To find out more about the ballet and the company, visit the website : http://www.balletpixelle.org/ .

Gemma Cleanslate

Monday, May 7, 2012

Interview with Michi Lumin

The Luskwood community is a unique one in Second Life, both as the most well known "furry" place on the Grid, and probably the oldest one furry or otherwise with it's ninth anniversary coming later this year. Among the four residents whom started the place, or founders, the most known is Michi Lumin. Recently I met up with Michi, and we agreed to meet for an interview. So a couple days later she sent me a teleport to her home far over Luskwood, and we got to business.

Bixyl Shuftan, "So how did you find out about Second Life?"

Michi Lumin, "Well, Eltee actually told me about it. I was on FurryMuck at the time, and I remember Eltee kind of talking about this 'Second Life' thing in casual conversation... and showing me a picture of her, just kind of wearing 'fox ears' at the times, standing in front of this LindenWorld build, an amusement park."

"I remember thinking 'what is this, some kind of virtual dating service?' She told me I should try it, and I logged on mostly as an 'Ok ok Eltee whatever you say' sort of thing, humoring her, fully intending to log off and never go back again after I 'gave it a shot' for Eltee's sake, heh."

Bixyl Shuftan, "Sounds like it was much better than you were expecting."

Michi Lumin, "Well, yeah, I mean it was different than I was expecting. When I got in, after doing some customization of my avatar (human one at that point of course), I guess the first thing I realized was the difference as far as customizability goes and I was really building my own image from the second I started. Later that day, I went to a little gathering put on by Candie Apple (I believe that was her name) who Eltee knew, and it was sort of a quick building tutorial. So a few hours in, first thing I made in SL was a hat, a fedora with a purple band."

Bixyl Shuftan, "So building from Day One?"

Michi Lumin, "Yeah, Building from hour one, really. It was different then, though. Everyone on the entire grid knew each other. I think that's something that folks don't understand as possible these days. Concurrency was maybe 100 people at most. Ahern was a 'nice place to be' and Lindens hung around all day long, interacting with residents. So as soon as you logged on you were pretty much welcomed in; there weren't griefers then, and nobody was figuring that anyone was going to log into SL for any reason but to be part of the community."

Bixyl Shuftan, "Sounds quite different from today, or even a few years ago."

Michi Lumin, "Well, yeah. I've told folks the stories but I might as well put it down on paper now as history really -does- seem to get rewritten or at the very least, lost: The biggest worries back then were 'taxes', Linden Lab would charge you 'height taxes' and 'light taxes'; every prim would cost L$10 to rez but you'd get that L$10 back for derezzing it, or finding prims on public land (which there was lots of) and returning them."

"You could walk around the world (the mainland, since there were no private estates or sims, just the mainland) and with 'Show Owners' on, instead of seeing: group land (blue), your land (green) other people's land (red) or land for sale (yellow), you'd see something you NEVER see anymore: WHITE patches of land with 'show owners' that were just patches that were L$1/m2."

"They'd lay there, waiting for someone to buy them. I remember when we were first building out Luskwood, we spent a few days thinking on buying 'that L$1/m2 patch of land across the sim', we could really spend a few days considering it as there were no land bots or land barons."

Bixyl Shuftan, "Sounds like more service fees than the bank .... pretty different with the land too. How did the idea for Luskwood begin?"


Michi Lumin, "We had our little group, Liam, Arito, Eltee and I, and we'd sit around in 'eltee's treehouse' (image left), which was just really a treehouse in Lusk that she was building. Liam, Eltee and I had all come from the text MUCK/MUSH background and had a furry background, and then there was 'this guy Arito' who had been toying with ideas of sticking prims on the human avatar to make them look like furry costumes."

"The four of us would hang out at Eltee' treehouse and talk about the world, build things while we were talking, sort of the social dynamic that still happens in today's Luskwood, just a much smaller group." (image just below)

"So, we were all there tinkering and we were buying up this land and expanding around the treehouse, and Liam made this, wooden owl. Kind of the thing that your grandfather would have, and we joked about it. We could open up a little 'general store', and sell country-bumpkin sort of trinkets; wooden owl lamps, there was a disco ball, I made a lava lamp, Eltee made a 'wooden indian'- and built this little round hut to put our projects in and Liam called it jokingly the "Luskwood General Store."

"The General Store sat right next to Eltee's treehouse, and they were of comparable size at the time. Some nights we'd make weird stuff (Eltee made some wooden art-deco and glass looking 'quiz machine'), and other times we'd work on our avatars. Having a furry background and with Arito toying with this 'prim-on-your-head' method of building out a human avatar to furry, we'd all work on our appearance, some days, too. Every few days there would be a "show and tell" in Ahern, and, naturally, when we had our stuff ready, kind of one by one. Arito made his dragon, at the time; he made Eltee's fox. Liam made his own weird lizard creature and Arito started on my dragon -which I also was at the time- and I kind of went with it and added to it and finished it. We'd go to these Show and Tell sessions and show them off."

"Now keep in mind, back then Lindens announced EVERY single event to the ENTIRE grid. So if Show and Tell was going on in Ahern, everyone (which wasn't -that- many people) knew about it."

"So, here we were customizing our appearances in ways that nobody had really done before, and naturally we got a lot of 'Hey can you guys make one of those for me?' Arito started building them out; and Liam jumped into doing it too, to cover the demand. Pretty much all we did at the start were customs, and we charged something ridiculously low, like L$1000-1500 for a full custom avatar. Sure, they were simpler then and didnt take as much time, but L$ had a different meaning then, too."

"Everyone relied on stipend since there wasn't really a LindeX or anything, and the most your stipend would cap out at was 'whatever took you to L$3500', based on ratings: what other people thought of you, displayed on your profile, your rank on the 'leaderboard' (yeah, people got 'points' back then and L$ for them) and stuff like that. So, L$1500 was a pretty significant amount then."

"Most of the first furry avatars in Second Life can still be seen, well, images of them at least, in the bottom of our tree. Those were all the customs we did when Luskwood was starting out."

"After a period of time, though, demand got too high. There's some historical notes here: Arito set out to make something called the "Luskwood Creature Creator," where potentially you could choose your ear styles, head type, muzzle type, color, eye type, hands, body type, texture, color, etc etc. It looked like a little kiosk and had an 'old time steam engine' behind it. This, while ambitious, proved to be too much of an 'n*x^y' problem; especially with LSL's limitations back then. Essentially, making a 'build-a-bear' type machine was just too complex."

"So, what we did was we made a bunch of pre-made versions of the avatars, in a number of different colors; starting with cats, bats, foxes. and just let people pick between those baselines and made them copy-OK and mod-OK, since we definitely wanted people to customize them."

"We got rid of the 'steam machine' behind the kiosk and replaced the 'parts' buttons with pattern buttons which would show the 'base' avatar you were picking. We priced that at L$900, because back then every signup got L$1500 on their first week. We figured, in their very first week, from the get-go, they could log in and buy a furry av for L$900, and have enough left over for clothing, and 'prims' to customize themselves."

"So there are a few historical things there. People wonder why our vendors still say something like "LCC Wolf Black", when our name is Luskwood, or Luskwood Creatures, not "LCC" anything. That's an old holdover from "Luskwood Creature Creator" (LCC) which was what the 'machine' which is now the vendors, became. And, because of that 'L$900' decision, most furry avs to this day are still around L$800-L$1000 in price point."

"Also, this kind of started the trend of furry avatars being 'no transfer but, copy-OK and mod-OK,' we wanted to set things up as a customizable 'tweak your own' market. Other markets went in different directions. For example, you'd see a lot of 'no copy' clothing, since they wanted you to buy another of the same shirt for every 'outfit' you made. (This was recently made obsolete with SL 2.x's 'outfits'). But this was the first instance of 'avatar vending,' and the whole concept of this kiosk you could walk up to, pick a few options, and it'd send you a furry avatar to put on as a starting point."

"And that, also, I want to underline this:  we did this to take care of demand. We had a lot of people coming to us, 'I want to be a fox,' 'I want to be a cat' and they'd ask for the same ... basic thing. So we ended up doing the same thing over and over again. We never thought that things would expand or that even furry avs would be big in SL. The (used to be) famous line was, from Arito, 'If we sell 100 of these, I will eat a prim, in real-life.' Meaning he would eat an actual block of wood I guess. He actually said that and I think we were all kind of jokingly on board with it. We figured this would kind of cut down on the customs demand for a bit so we could concentrate on the more unique species and stuff, instead of building 20 foxes in a row. We absolutely never meant for it to, or thought it would, go anywhere beyond that."

Bixyl Shuftan chuckles, "So did anyone ask him 'You want salt with that?'"

Michi Lumin, "Well, heh, I remember when we went to SLCC 2006, Linden Lab gave out these LED flashing cubes. They said something on them like 'It all starts with a cube,' meaning that's how all builds started back then -- no sculpts, no mesh. And we joked, 'You know Ari you could eat that and make good on it.' (grin)"

Bixyl Shuftan chuckles

Michi Lumin, "I don't want to give exact numbers but, even with the change in SL demographics and trends, we passed 50,000 avatars out there quite a while ago."

Bixyl Shuftan, "Sounds pretty great."

Michi Lumin, "It's very odd to think, that it was almost a decade ago. When we were starting, things like YouTube and Facebook weren't even thought up yet."

Bixyl Shuftan, "When people started out in Second Life around 2006, 2007, one of the starter avatars was a Luskwood. How did this come about?"

Michi Lumin, "Well, Linden Lab was looking for starter content for new folks. They let everyone know that, you could contribute something and perhaps get it put in this new 'library' folder, where some starter content was. Back then, already, in the signup screen, they had a picture of one of our avatars - the fox, and I remember it was actually a picture of a really shy dude, who never talked much. How he got his picture, in our av, as signup picture, I don't know. But, the furry crowd was growing at that point and I know a lot of them were pinging LL for a bit of 'representation.' "

"A lot of people joke about it or even deride it now, 'What have furries ever done for SL.' But truth be told we were a very large part of the formative population from the beginnings of Second Life. So Linden Lab basically told us if we made something, they'd put it in the library. By then there were some other av makers coming up, I forget the names of all of them but I know Lost Furest was one."

"So, Liam and Eltee got together in Perry, in our Perry build box - which is actually still there, we just don't use it anymore. And, there was a bit of liquor involved, and with Arito doing the prims and Liam doing the textures, they just did this whirlwind building session and came up with something called 'Library Wild Dogs' or something. They got carried away, and, added these stripes, tribal markings, dreamcatcher-like earrings and stuff, basically going at it because they hit their stride that night, and ended up with this 'tribal dog' that was all sort of decorated."

"We stepped back and looked at that and (really, heh) thought: 'If we put this in the library, some of the upcoming smaller av vendors are going to be totally decimated by this being a freebie.' Because, at the time, for the time, it was pretty dang good."

"So, we put those away, and figured, well, Arito had this ringtail he made a while back and, we could 'redo it,' clean it up, make it a bit less rough around the edges and put THAT in the library instead. It was a specific av, and didn't have this weird broad "dog and cat at the same time" appeal like the 'tribal dogs' did."

"The ringtail was also really simple, and could get someone started on a furry, and even modification. Remember though, Second Life itself was really limited then, too. I think people don't remember that when they see our old stuff. But it was enough to get their feet wet, and a lot of people DID modify that ringtail into something else."

"As for the 'wild dogs', those went on to become Jogauni.The Jogauni, which, at least over the history of things, honestly were probably one of our most successful avatars. Which we actually don't intend to give up on, updates to something with that kind of 'canon' have to be done carefully. They were made on a whim and almost by mistake."

Bixyl Shuftan, "Sounds quite interesting."

Michi Lumin, "Well, yeah, back then stuff was, often, a lot more carefree and less political, heh. We spent the majority of our time just doing what we wanted to do, versus what we had to do (grin)."

Bixyl Shuftan, "What have been some of the challenges over time?"

Michi Lumin, "Well, the market shifts for one. It's hard to quite elucidate in the proper nuanced manner but: the Second Life furry population does demand a certain look right now, which really was never quite our style. We are working on merging our techniques into it. But, we don't want to in any way just become another follower. So, people who are new out there, may see our stuff and say 'Hey, how come your avs dont look like x?' -- And it's hard to answer to someone who doesn't know the history and roots by saying, 'Well, we're not X, we're Luskwood, and we're going to make stuff the way we believe in.' There's really absolutely no point in just cloning everyone else. Sure, it may confuse a few people into some new sales, but the moment you start chasing other people's visions, you lose track of your own."

"There will, I believe, always be people who see our stuff and like it on its own merits, versus what everyone else is wearing. I continue to see that. We still, absolutely, sell lots of avatars, and we still, absolutely, have a lot of designs in process. Most recently, the cat updates, which are still on their way; really seeing Cat 1.0, 2.0 and 3.0 shows just this amazing evolution while retaining the basics of our look and personality."

"Real life has gotten in the way of that release a touch, but the delays have not been for design reasons at all. Me, I've got my own real-life things I'm dealing with. And Liam, well, Pre-Med isn't exactly a cakewalk. But the fact that we can still do this in spite of everything else we have going on I think speaks positively, not negatively."

"Our Crow Gryph was one of the first, if not the first, production furry av to use mesh. I think it looks pretty awesome by today's standards, and that one took Liam 10 days from back-of-napkin idea to release."

Bixyl Shuftan, "10 days? That's fast."

Michi Lumin, "It was. When it's based on pure creativity and unencumbered by real-life, it goes fast. It was similar to the 'jogauni session' in spirit. We're going to be releasing a more complete line of the gryphons, that was sort of a 'taste', and we released it as a Halloween av because of that. We didn't even consider it final, but for something that wasn't even final I think it's pretty complete."

"Other difficulties are griefers and politics, but, I'm not so sure there's a whole lot of interesting 'there' there. I think we all know how that stuff goes. It's just a noise floor. A louder one than it was back in the day, but still just noise."

Bixyl Shuftan, "Yes, in your opinion, why does Luskwood seem to attract griefers? Especially given it's squeaky-clean image."

Michi Lumin, "Well, I think that's a huge part of it actually. Causing trouble in a G-rated sim is a whole lot more satisfying to them, I think, than causing trouble at some weird, off-the-wall, raunchy A-rated sim where their daily lives are more 'shocking' than anything a griefer could pull out. Obscene particles in a G sim have a bit more impact than obscene particles at a strip joint."

"Of course there's also the fact that we're out in the open, and, while furries themselves in Second Life know of all of these other venues, we were the first to really make headway as far as recognition goes for the non-furry population. A lot of non-furries still think 'Luskwood' when they hear 'furry and SL'. Plus we're there on the mainland and easy to get to."

"We're right next to Ahern, after all, and Ahern is a hive of scum and villainy. (grins)That was a joke. Not an entirely inaccurate one, but, still a joke.

Bixyl Shuftan chuckles, "What about Ahern?"

Michi Lumin, "I think there's this idea that some other furry sims go and hide themselves away and 'mind their own business' while we're seen as trying to put ourselves out there 'on the mainland for everybody to see.' It's like folks who say they're 'okay with gay people as long as they don't thrust it in MY face' etc. It means they're really NOT ok with it, and they seem to think we're somehow 'continuing to exist on the mainland' as a big middle finger to 'the normals.' It really isn't that. It's that this is where we started, and people don't realize that private islands didn't exist and the mainland was tiny. And, in my opinion, we *are* normals. I have to make it clear that you do not have to be furry to come to Luskwood any more than you have to be Chinese to go to a Chinese restaurant. It's just silly to think otherwise, but a lot of people with a chip on their shoulder will come by, act up, and claim we're booting them because of their avatar. Personally I don't even notice their avatar since my head is too buried in the text going by."

"Ahern? Well, Ahern used to be a really kinda nice chummy place where folks would hang out with Lindens. Now, it seems to be the de-facto gathering spot and, not even being a full sim away, it's also another world away. Ahern appears to have its own power structures these days, and its own norms, and its a bit chaotic. So while Ahern regulars aren't bad people, a lot of times, some questonable folks will go there to show off, since they know they have an audience."

"And, of course, once they're 'done there,' they'll say 'Hey let's go to this furry place with the big tree that has the word wood in the name, you know,' 'Huhuhuh, you said wood! Huhuhuh.' "

Bixyl Shuftan, "Heh, sounds like some rather sophmoric characters."

Michi Lumin, "And I think us being G-rated, (General, note: not MPAA-G, we aren't a movie) is just icing on the cake to them because griefing in Luskwood is a whole lot more like farting in church than belching at a biker rally."

"Sophomoric? Yeah, there's a sort of troll ecosystem. Old trolls grow up and get bored, and then new ones come in and do the exact same thing their forefathers did, and seem to think it's the most clever thing since plastic testicles on diesel trucks. For us mostly its just ' here we go again,' and it's more sort of a boring rote annoyance. I'm sure they feel it's outright shocking, but really for us it's just another eye-roller."

Bixyl Shuftan, "One question someone asked me was how come Luskwood places a time limit on it's bans, four hours I believe it is, even for the most obvious griefers."

Michi Lumin, "Ok, that's not entirely true at all. We do use a graduated system, but people see the 'initial ban'. For 'normal' offenders, we will do a 2 hour, then a 4 hour, then a 6 day, then permanent. However, generally there's a 4-hour ban which is just to 'get them off of the parcel' and if it was especially egregious they'll be entered into the system and banned again upon return, if its a 'permanent ban.' The land ban list maxes out at a certain number, and to avoid us ever hitting that number, we use the land-ban list as nothing but a 'cache'."

"So, if the bans only reside 'on land' for 4 hours, you'll never fill that up, and you're not using up ban slots on people who aren't even online at the time. Our actual sequence is: warning, eject, 2 or 4 hours, depending on seriousness, then 6 days, then permanent. But for sure, people who we know right out are never gonna be anything but a negative, we do 'opt out' of their shennanigans, and that ends up being a permanent ban."

"It seems to me that Second Life is changing in that respect, too. Many new SLers seem to feel that any ban, for any reason, whatsoever, is unjustified. Kind of like, 'Sure, they crashed the sim 3 times but man, you didn't have to *ban* them, that's just rude!'  So the social sphere is changing again, and we're getting some static for not getting with the program. We have our own program, and a lot of people like it. There are folks who would rather be in a friendly neighborhood pub than in the audience for an ultimate fighting cage match. I'd rather we be more like 'Cheers' (this dates me, I know) than, say, some underground hardcore club."

"As much as people will say, 'Well, I ran a sim and…' or 'I went to this club and…' and tries to compare it to us -- again we are not trying to be like them. We've been doing this for near 10 years, and I think if we were 'getting it completely wrong', we would have shut down a long time ago. There are still new faces, at least a dozen I can think of in the last few weeks, in Luskwood, and there will continue to be. I think it's cool now that we have some human av semi-regulars who come by just to discuss stuff. That'd be unlikely to happen in a lot of other places."

Bixyl Shuftan, "Yes, Luskwood is one place in which you can always count on a group being around, even at odd hours. I've also seen some people from places such as Russia."

Michi Lumin, "We can't be everything to everyone. But we can be the sort of place that has the social climate that we and our folks really believe in. And if you've never been to Luskwood and come in during a more active time, without preconcieved notions, you may be surprised. (smile)"

"Oh, we have staff members and regulars from Russia, the UK, Australia, Germany, Spain, Japan, Canada, Sweden, even the Isle of Man. I could go on, there. We're trying to get more regular events going, stuff that isn't mind-shatteringly spectacular, but stuff that folks can look forward to."

Bixyl Shuftan, "I recall a few events over time, such as the spontaneous stack of avatars."

Michi Lumin, "Yup. That was before the current physics system. Folks would get an idea to just stack themselves as high as they could go. Now, I think that doesn't work, but I don't recall how high they got, 30 or so, maybe more. This New Year's is actually going to be our 10th New Year's party, as we began a bit before the end of the year. And it'll be our 9th anniversary in September or so."

Bixyl Shuftan, "What are your plans for those? And does Luskwood plan an SL9B event, on it's own or with anyone else?"

Michi Lumin, "Well, we didn't exactly set fire to the city with LW8B or our 9th New Year's. But '10' is more of a landmark so I think this New Years we'll try to make it pretty significant (smile). LW10B next year is going to be, well, presuming everything goes as planned, it should be huge. If Second Life makes it that far, right? But that's always been a question (grin) I never thought we'd make it to 5 years."

Bixyl Shuftan, "You're afraid SL might come to an end soon? I recall people expressed worry that Congress might pass something that would potentially cripple online places such as Second Life, as well as Facebook and Youtube."

Michi Lumin, "Oh… That? Well, eh, okay, the legislations, yeah, I see the concerns but, I don't think that'll actually happen that way. Potential to, but, kind of like the Australian net filter that never quite happened; people won't let that happen. There's a lot of hysteria about it, but I've been online since the early 80s. I just don't think people are going to take that sitting down. So that's not my worry."

"I'm more worried about Linden Lab selling Second Life off, or changing its focus completely. Linden Lab as a company is a huge, huge mystery. So I don't have any reason to think they're about to drop Second Life, but, in a vacuum (which we all are in, as residents) you tend to fill in a lot of 'what ifs'."

"Linden Lab says that Second Life is profitable for them. And they are, for sure, working on newer projects. But, since LL has this policy of 'Residents? What residents?' - they're a very closed society (they used to not be), and they don't really engage SL's population at all. So, they could be making decisions at this very moment that absolutely do not have Second Life's resident population in mind whatsoever, and we wouldn't even know about it until it was rolled out."

"I wish that would change, because there was a time when Linden Lab was more transparent and open, more engaging and interested, and resdients were really able to participate in more than token manners. But that time has long since passed and I think the corporate culture over there has been cemented in a few times now, and is unlikely to change. There are still some REALLY GOOD Linden Lab employees, and I'm not saying Linden Lab is cackling behind steepled fingers. We just don't know. As residents, we just aren't looped in about these things."

Bixyl Shuftan, "So despite that things have gone more or less smoothy, despite what some consider questionable changes (which are noted in the Newser), you feel they might pull something that would end up crippling the Grid?"

Michi Lumin, "Not crippling so much as changing it. Obsoleting these old forgotten models. I've been here longer than a good portion of Linden Lab employees have, and I've had a lot of LL employees come to me saying 'why are you doing it this way?' and I answer, 'well, because that's the way we've always done it'. And they don't get that, they don't know Second Life's history, they aren't engaged in its social spheres, and can't fathom why anyone would be. Linden Lab, I think, sees old cultures here and old residents here as a bit of an annoyance that keeps them from doing new things. I'd differ on that, I think we just feel that we have some stake in this world and want a say in the process. Not that we don't want them to do anything new. Just that we want to be formative like we have been in the past."

"I don't think Linden Lab necessarily understands that we do have vested interest in this world. Well, some Lindens do. But I don't think that as a corporate policy they really take current users into account all that much. It's always this idea of 'why coddle the users you have, when around the corner, if we appeal to this group that isn't even here yet, we could have ten times as many.' -- That, it seems, really hasn't worked all that well for them so far and I'm not sure why they insist on that line of thought. Second Life used to grow due to word of mouth, and maybe the current board doesn't think that's powerful or rapid enough. But I think it'd be a lot more powerful and a lot more rapid than what's going on now. Second Life still could be seen as a really cool thing out there. 'Social' is a buzzword now but people keep trying to get there by throwing tech at it, by throwing widgets at it."

"Social isn't about widgets. Social is about society, and Social is about community. I'm surprised that Linden Lab hasn't sunk their project direction into encouraging community and helping them operate. Community is what converts and retains people, not a UI. If the people and the place are compelling enough, the UI falls into the background and becomes nothing but a detail. But for some reason LL seems to think there's an interface design they could change, or some features they could simplify, or an operational/mechanical trend they could follow and suddenly they'd be the apple of the Internet's eye."

"Facebook, for example, isn't popular because they've got walls, or they've got likes, or they've got a timeline layout. They're popular because that's where all of your friends are. If Second Life really nurtured communities more, and yeah some of that may be walking a bit away from the 'wild west', completely hands-off attitude, I really believe more people would come. And more folks would bring more folks, and we'd see some real growth again and some opinion changes out there.

"There's a whole lot of 'broken windows theory' going on in Second Life right now. A new person logs on, folks are rude to them, or they grief them, and the company who owns the grid seems non-present and non-engaging, and they walk into this sprawling no-man's-land and have to fend for themselves from day one. Instead of finding one of many vibrant communities that are using the SL system to their vision. I have so many people come to me and say, 'Michi, this is my second time 'round at Second Life. If I had found Luskwood 2 or 3 years ago I would have stayed.' "

"But we don't get to concentrate enough on stuff like that. On building community and stuff. Because on one hand we'll be dealing with external issues, such as grievers. Which, by the way, really we have seen a drop in, in the last two years or so. But I don't think this is due to Linden Lab's intervention. I think it's due to griefers not being really interested in SL anymore."

"And on the other hand we'll be having to cope with some new change or defect or shift in way of doing things that Linden Lab just deposited on our doorstep. I think it was Blue Linden, before he left Linden Lab, who said to us once, 'Wow, Michi, we really don't make it easy as we could, for you guys to exist on here, do we.' - and no, really, LL doesn't. We've gotten pretty good at knowing the ins and outs of the system where we can though, to keep flying."

Bixyl Shuftan, "Oh yes, I remember Blue. He would go to events and interact with residents."

Michi Lumin, "Yep. And that, I feel, is one of the reasons he was one of the first folks out the door when the revolution came. There's some view, somewhere in Linden Lab culture, that takes a very negative view of residents. And that isn't official policy, in fact I think one of the main tenets of LL corporate mantra is 'How will this affect our residents?' But, I think the unofficial tagline is: 'Residents. They just get in the way. They're just a bother.' Maybe that's a bit harsh and believe me, I have to underline twice: there are LL employees who do NOT feel that way (and I'm sure you know who you are). But at the same time, Linden Lab *as a company* does NOT see Residents as their customers or clients. And that's one of the main problems, along with Lindens not 'living' in SL, or 'understanding life in Second Life' because they aren't generally 'on the ground' with us residents."

"Linden Lab, in my opinion, and it is just my opinion, sees themselves, or their board of directors, as SL's 'clients' or 'customers.' It's really mind-blowing. I don't know of any other place, any other company or service, where you can pay upwards of $295 a month, and not have any sort of SLA, or any sort of real customer service. If I had a T1 from the phone company, I'd have better service, -as a customer-, than I do with Linden Lab. I suppose they figure there aren't any viable alternatives. And, with us, I suppose they figure we've got our legacy here, and we do, but there are some other projects I've been involved in besides Luskwood, which really could have gotten off the ground. But, sims didn't work, stuff crashed, regions were unavailable for extended periods of time, etc."

"And you call Linden Lab, or use Live Chat, and they pretty much seem to just exist to 'say no' much of the time. Again I'd say in the past 6 months maybe that's changing a little. But if I'm having a problem with a region's stability, that we're paying $295 a month for, historically, they won't really do much for you. One of the projects I'm involved in, one of our sims was down for a full day late last year. Calling Concierge and Support pretty much lead to us getting told that 'there are rolling restarts, please wait.' "

"The problem wasn't rolling restarts. (grin) After a day, we finally got someone who gave a damn, and said 'Huh, if this was a rolling restart it should have been down for an hour, not 26.' -- and it was just the toughest thing to even get someone at Linden Lab to take us seriously, as 'real' customers who may even know what they're talking about, having done this thing for quite a while. It's a bit disparaging to get told to hit F1 for help when you were part of creating a good portion of what 's in the knowledge base to begin with."

"We generally don't go to Linden Lab support unless we know it's a real problem that we absolutely can't affect. For one, it's not a pleasant experience. And I don't think they want it to be -- I think they want to dissuade folks from it. And second, we don't want to cry wolf. We still want to be good customers, even if we're not really seen as customers."

"I would -love- to see an engaging, 'meet-you-half-way' change in Linden Lab, and one that does see community as important, residents as essential, and their users as actual clients and customers. I still have hope that it can happen. Meanwhile, we're going to try to maintain being this little spot of 'SL as we see it' in spite of all of the paradigm shifts that happen. We still do good things. We still have great people. We still have a good time and we still believe in what we're doing."

"Long road, yeah, and we've always been hoping to hit smoother pavement as time went on, but I know full well that was never guaranteed to us. I wish I could name some of the good people that are still in Second Life,  Linden, av maker, resident -- that really still do contribute to the common good here. I want to make it clear that I feel that there are still plenty of those. I just think SL could be a lot better than it is these days, and I hope that potential isn't squandered."

Bixyl Shuftan, "Besides the anniversary events, and the avatar updates you mentioned, what do you think the future holds for Luskwood? Someone once told me even if Second Life vanished overnight, you'd pop up somewhere else."

Michi Lumin, "Well, we absolutely plan to have contingency plans. So yes, if Second Life went away, I'd tell people to watch the Luskwood site for what's happening next. As far as SL goes, we're talking about renovation plans and some kind of interesting expansions into other arenas that I can't fully talk about right now, but they're pretty cool."

"One thing we don't do, is give up easy. Luskwood may have been born on SL, but I really doubt it will die on it. The fact that 9 years in, we're still getting motivated folks who really want to be part of a forward direction, be it in av making, the community and events, the design of the sims, and even branched-out offshoot projects with Luskwood as their root, shows that on an evolutionary scale, this phase may just be seen as the beginning. I never thought I'd be here in 2012, so I've learned to not predict where we will, or won't be, down the line. But the tree still has a lot of life left in it."

Bixyl Shuftan, "Anything else you'd like to mention, like that top hat and goggles? Where did that come from?"

Michi Lumin, "Heh it's funny, it's such a part of my image now. People ask where to get them. These were a gift from Arito, who, well, while frenetic (and, he is still around! I talked to him, today, he's just very busy with personal real-life projects), he asked me once,'What kind of hat do you like?' And I described this, and he made it in, 20 minutes?"

Bixyl Shuftan, "Nice."

Michi Lumin, "A lot of what I wear has personal significance. The hat is from Arito. And, I like to say that it's what weights down my personality, and I hope to not get 'too big for my hat' (grin). I'm not a big deal, I just have a big hat. (smile) The knife on my arm, that was made by Tengu, and he's been here since the early days, helping us and defending us, as the years rolled by. And that signifies I think that I'm willing to put up a fight. And I am, most people know that. (smile) The bat necklace came from Anne, from AnneDroid Lily, and i've worn that on every avatar I have, since the early days. She gave that to me as a gift too. So, I carry a lot of people around with me, through Second Life."

Bixyl Shuftan, "That was nice of them."

Michi Lumin, "It's kind of like why Eltee wears her old fox av. Sure it's not the most modern thing, but it was given to her by a friend, by Arito as well, for her birthday. And really I think that means a whole lot more than looking like the slickest thing in the sim. Fans come and go, (and more often go) Friends stay even when times get rough. And we've had our share of rough times (smile).  I'd rather have 12 friends than 120 fans. I'd rather have 2 friends than 1200 fans. (smile)."

Bixyl Shuftan, "Well, thank you for your time. By the way, one of my friends bought up a bunch of Lusk Fox avatars. I recall one friend asking about the Husky avatars."

Michi Lumin, "Oh? Soon, we're going to be hitting the updates for those. I don't want to say when because whenever we say when, life rears its head and things get changed. But watch for new stuff on those down the line here. We get a lot of questions about which avs will be updated next (smile). We cant do them all at once of course and it always seems like 'your' av, is the one that isn't getting updated (grin). But, we will do it, and we are working on new ones too."

It was about this time the interview ended, and we went our separate ways.

Michi is most often found at the Big Tree platform in Luskwood, or at nearby places in Lusk during events such as the theater or the Primatory stage. But she, and other founders, have been seen elsewhere, such as Bay City a few sims away to the west.





Luskwood's website is located at http://luskwood.org/. Michi Lumin also has an entry in Wikifur (image credit).


Bixyl Shuftan

Thursday, May 3, 2012

Goodbye Perri, Hopefully Only For Now

A little sad news from the HV Community sim, where I make my home on the Grid. One of my neighbors, Perri Prinz, has made a name for herself as a DJ in Second Life, in my opinion one of the best in her selection of 60 and 70s music. She would play at Cutlass, Club Zero Gravity, and other clubs. With her partner RECoyote Mindes, she also owned a club of her own, the Green Meadows Club, which friends also called Perri's Xanadu. Her music got her many fans, and her gentle manner a number of friends. And of course there was her partner RECoyote.

Outside of Second Life, Perri, or "Hunny Bunny" as she sometimes calls herself, was also known as a writer. She wrote the chapters for Spectral Shadows, a long series of stories that mixed themes such as time travel, Fantasy, and Science Fiction, going back for many years. A teleporter at Xanadu would take one to a gallery of Spectral Shadows Illustrations. She would also put some thoughts in a Livejournal, which went across a number of subjects, such as music.

Her latest Livejournal post however was a sad one.

Perri suffered from health problems in real life, and as much as she loved her friends and playing her music, the technical glitches could sometimes just be too much, requiring her to take occasional breaks to rest up. Running her club had proven to be a bundle of nerves, so friends from the FCA club alliance, including myself, had recently been helping her to try to get Green Meadows/Xanadu up and running again.

Unfortunately, one event she had spent hours preparing for happened to occur right on the very day the Grid was hit with its "Unscheduled Maintenance." Not only was getting online difficult, but nothing seemed to work, notably her music stream. It was then she felt there was nothing better to do but leave the Grid for good, saying goodbye to her friends who managed to show up despite the glitches that day.

Since then, Perri's gotten a number of messages from friends and well wishers.  And she responded she might return after an extended hiatus to heal, "REC and my friends … I'm missing them already. … I hate the thought of never being with … the others again. … We'll see what happens. I just pulled the plug. I didn't throw out the computer." Perri's Livejournal entry and responses can be found here: http://symphonic-rp.livejournal.com/203000.html .

As for Club Green Meadows, events there have come to a close, at least for now. It's possible later on the FCA club alliance will try to get the club running again with others playing the music Perri was noted for.

Goodbye our friend, at least for now,

Bixyl Shuftan

*Addition* Perri did come back a few days after this was written.

Monday, April 30, 2012

"The A List"


               Within the vastness of Second Life there is a great deal to explore and any person, unless guided by a friend or knowing where to search or what to look for, can easily get overwhelmed. There’s so many clubs and places to hang out at, it’s easy to get lost.

When I was a noob in SL almost 5 years ago (My rez date is 6/12/2007), and didn’t really know anyone as I aimlessly wandered around looking to make new friends and see where the hot spots were. When I first started SL I didn’t know I had to be in a sandbox to open a furry avatar box. Luckily one of the people I ran into was a lady named Raftwet Jewell at a club named TJ Icey’s, which is now dance Island. Raftwet is Xavier’s wife as Xavier Thiebaud is the founder of the group you may have heard about from hearsay called the “The A List.”

Now there’s good news for someone wondering where the best of the best resides in SL and where their digital self needs to go. “The A List” compiles all of the best events into one group. It’s pretty handy when lots of clubs ask for a group to become a VIP to get the heads up on their events. At 42 groups max that would take up lots of space getting a VIP at every club you liked. Plus there’s non club groups you may like. Even worse is when you only had 25 groups a few years ago. The A List solves that one problem.

            In the words of Xavier Thiebaud the founder of the SL “The A List,” “It seemed as if there was a need to be filled. Raftwet and I collectively travelled the grid and invited those who had excellence. Before that everyone was segregated and very cliquey. It was not easy but we successfully tied many people from many walks of life and interest into our group.”

Xavier and his longtime wife Raftwet worked hard around SL nurturing their A List making it grow. For the past four years since its birth Xavier and Raftwet looked in every nook and cranny of the digital realm of Second Life looking for the best to add to their list.

One great thing as I got answers back from Xavier and Raft is that anyone would find something of interest from the A List. For example my buddy Qwark Allen when I logged on SL happened to DJing 80’s music and pop music along with some house. The only way I knew he was DJing by checking the A List under notices. I quickly ported over and had a great time.

Xavier told me that everything from Opera to Country music is on “The A List.” Art gallery openings to opera to grand ballrooms to dance with that special someone. Opera or art not your cup of tea? There are also notices about DJs playing electronic music like Trance, house, techno or psytrance from a popular DJ like Healer Ladybird or Qwark Allen. You’re not into a techno beat? There are live rock performers on the A List as well to warp to and listen in and have a good time. Not really in a music mood but you would rather laugh? The A List has comedy acts too!

Any Joe or Jane resident is allowed to join the A List after being in SL for one year sorry for those who just started SL a month ago or so. However if you just started SL you could still follow them on Facebook under the A List. Some A list members have the ability to send notices to promote their clubs or live performers to promote their live music act.

For example if a live performer or DJ wanted to promote him or herself they have to talk to Xavier and or Raft to be able to send notices.  This helps keeps the group spam free keeps up the high quality of the A List’s musicians and artists etc. Nobody wants to see a notice about to keep their teeth clean in Second Life either. Also not being a drama Llama helps and Xavier doesn’t want any D listers however in Xavier’s words

Xavier Thiebaud, "We look for people who are at least a year old, so most of the time it means they are established on the grid."

Xavier hinted there was celebrities within the A list that you could see with the tag “A List Celebrity”  around SL. Xavier told me that as of now there’s a little over 400 people within the A List.

Xavier says to join the A List as a year or older avatar you have to pay a one-time fee of 2,500 Linden UNLESS you happen to know a friend to refer you. The good news is I Grease Coakes am a member of the A list so if I know you I could refer you to the A List if you’re a buddy of mine.

So if you want the very best of SL and you have been around a year at least look into the A List by searching under groups “THE A LIST!” Xavier and Raftwet are always looking for fresh pixelated avatars to expand their A List and as I trade off you can tell your friends and family you’re a grade A avatar as a furry, human, robot or whatever.

Grease Coakes

Sunday, April 22, 2012

DJ "Naughty" Nydia's Day at the Relay




Sunday April 15th was a pretty active day for the Relay for Life. There was live musician ax Kleene performing for charity, and a Relay Road Rash party and racing event that I stopped at briefly. Among the events was an afternoon of DJs playing not just for the audience but also in a competition for the "Best DJ in SL" from 1 to 4 SL time.  It wasn't just for the day. Those who came out on top would be competing later in semifinals.

Among the teams there were the Passionate Redheads. And whom better to compete for the Redheads than the head of the FCA club alliance, the owner of Club Zero Gravity, and experience from numerous clubs around Second Life: the Redheads' own DJ "Naughty" Nydia Tungsten.


TP on down and bring your friends- at The Legends Classic Rock Club - party is on the beach - jump on down! Nydia is getting ready - vote her best DJ in SL by donating to the kiosk while she plays!


The event was just outside the club, right beside the boardwalk and onto the beach, people dancing away on the sand as the DJ spun the tunes while dancing behind the stand. Madonna Milena was the DJ before Nydia, whom looked a bit naughty herself with her green latex outfit. But soon it was Nydia's turn, and friends of the "Vixen of Steel" human and furred alike ported in to both enjoy her music and support her in the competition. Nydia has a reputation for playing entertaining but occasionally raunchy fare. But she kept her selection somewhat tame for the Relay. Still, there were a few tunes that reminded people why her KVXN Radio's slogan is "where the random tunes are … random." Among them were, "He Had it Coming," "God is a Girl," and "Sexy Naughty Bitchy Me."


I pick all my skirts to be a little too, sexy,
Just like all of my thoughts, they always get a bit, naughty,
When I'm out with my girls, I always play a bit, bitchy,
Can't change the way I am,
sexy, naughty, bitchy me.


Throughout the hour, the crowd danced to Nydia's music and chipped in at the kiosk, a mix of avatar types and members of various Relay teams, as well as people outside the Relay coming for the music. Finally, the hour was up. Trader1 Whiplash thanked her, "Thank You Nydia. … Your Total was $L7,281." This put Nydia third among the DJs at the event in raising money, and at the end of the event, she was still in third.

Talking to Trader later on, he told me there would be two more weekends for the DJ contest, round two this weekend, round three next weekend. On May 5th, the top four of the DJs of all three weekends will compete in the semi-finals. The next day on May 6th, the top two face off at the May Day main stage.

The Passionate Redheads will be involved in another DJ event in a few days. On Tuesday April 24th, Dusk Griswold will be playing at the "Dual Decades" event at Club Cutlass.

Later on, Nydia and the Redheads headed to "Le Palais Du Soleil" in Southern Colorado (98, 170, 51). The purpose: to give out a motorcycle as the prize for a raffle. At locations, there was a special RFL kiosk, one with a purple crescent, and a picture of the prize motorcycle. But this wasn't just any motorcycle. This was a Special Edition MLCC Majestic with the RFL logo painted on.


April 15 one of the most hated days in the U.S.A. due to the fact it is the deadline to pay all TAXES, so why not give someone a great day by giving away the MLCC Majestic RFL special edition motorcycle  back where it all started the Le Palais du Soliel from 4 to 6 dress ready to ride , the tunes will be provided by DJ Naughty Nydia, so come ready to have a good time.


In contrast to the DJ contest, the dress at the raffle was more formal due to the settling. Attendence for the event was light at first, the raffle taking place at the same time as a number of other Relay events. But numbers soon picked up. For almost two hours, everyone danced to more of Nydia's tunes. Then it was time to choose a winner.

Nydia Tungsten: okay lets see who the winner is
RFL of SL 2012 Official Central Networked Raffle Vendor shouts: Whoo!  Well done to Skylark Lefavre You have won the raffle!
Nydia Tungsten: Heh, Skylark won!

Skylark "Strawberry Sweetkins" Lefavre, one of the Passionate Redheads team, had won the bike raffle. The raffle had brought in 4200 Lindens, bringing the total raised by the Redheads to over 40,000 Lindens. Nydia expressed her wish that the raffle had brought in more, but everyone else was pleased with the results.

As of the writing of this article, the Passionate Redheads have raised a total of 44,300 Lindens. This despite several key members being absent due to various real life problems. There are more events in store, including Dusk Griswold's DJ at Cutlass, and even a "Bid Me Human" event in the works.

Bixyl Shuftan

Friday, April 6, 2012

The New Life Church

Second Life reflects real life in a number of ways. Among them, people coming to church here on the Grid. Among them is the New Life Church, led by Sixgin Ares (Pastor Dan) and Lynne Applewhyte.

Sixgin is a pastor in real life, and has been in Second Life for a few years. In 2008 when interviewed by Second Life Newspaper, he was in charge of the Church of the Living God in the COTLG sim.

Lynne had gotten her start in another Grid, the Opensim New World. There, she learned how to build, and eventually owned two sims there. Forming the "New Life Church," others could join up and get a home there if they asked. The group went from a beginning number of five to 380. Trouble was, she found the place rather unstable.

She had first found out about Second Life in 2006, hearing about it on "Good Morning America." Giving it a try, however, "Everything was gray." A few years later, she had a new computer and was willing to give it another try. She began preaching there as well, finding it more stable. She continued to expand her ministries. She still does some work on Opensim, though is no longer expanding there.

Lynne first met up with Sixgin in 2011, him still preaching at his own church. Soon, he began holding services at hers. "He's pretty handy to have around," Lyne told me, then grinned, "So I married him. Actually, we met in real life. We married in December."

New Life Church in Second Life has several events a week. The Saturday service is at 11:45AM with Sixgin. The Sunday services are 11:45AM with Sixgen and 4:45 PM with Lynne. Tuesday has another sermon by Lynne at 4:45 PM. On Thursday at 4PM is a prayer group. On Friday, there is a Bible study group at 5PM.

There are dances at the nearby club every Saturday evening, and a small freebie store close by. There is a movie theater, which can show a total of 11 movies. There's also a 7Seas fishing area.

When asked how many attended services, they answered 14-16 was a frequent number, but it was growing over time. Anyone is welcome to join their church, and those with artistic talents are especially welcome. They sometimes preach at other places and groups in Second Life, such as Sarafina Flow's River of Life Ministries. They also do skits, recordings of some which can be found on youtube. They also have a group in Facebook: New Life Christian Center in Second Life.

Of those coming by their church on the Grid, "We find people come and go fairly quickly." Of the five founding members, "only we and Carpenter are left." They were introduced to Inworldz, but didn't find it as "cost effective" to establish a church as in Second Life, "there was a nice church … but few showed up."

Last Easter, a number of pastors came to New Life Church. Sixgin built a special stage, and the visiting preachers had up to a half an hour each to give a sermon. Their Christmas session had a candlelight service.

Lynne mentioned, "I was ordained a minister in real life. The ceremony was also done in Second Life." She mentioned one of the men from the board that approved her came to Second Life to see the church for himself. He observed things for a couple weeks. The inworld ceremony was about an hour. Sixgin and Lynn also redid their marriage ceremony in Second Life.

They described church services as "Biblical … rather than preach the law, we preach the love of Christ." The chichi is non-denominational, "we have all kinds come here."

Drama is of course not tolerated. So far, there have been no grieving incidents. Sixgen commented, "I feel when we preach the word here and preach in truth … God protects us." They've talked to an occasional troubled soul, once in a while suggesting to the person they go for professional help. Lynn told of a student asking her to pray she did well in college. She told her she would, but told her she still had to study, "We try to give practical advice in addition to praying to God." They brought up the mana from Heaven described in Exodus, reminding although God answered the Hebrews' prayer for food, they still had to go out and gather it, "A lot of people think God's going to do it all for them. … you have to earn it."

Although New Life Church is in a virtual world, Sixgin and Lynn say it's still a real ministry. Their plans for this Easter, during the interview in mid-March they felt they would have a revival. At the time, there was still a little landscaping being done, the current building being a recent one. Their tier was currently being covered by a friend.

Sixgin and Lynn mentioned one tale involving a visiting minister. A writer, he decided to do the pictures in Second Life for one story he was working on, "When he had a scene, he would pull his alt and act out the scene." He later published his story on Kindel. On his website, he included a picture of the New Life Church.

The New Life Church is in the Shelton sim. Porting to (179, 226, 52) will take one just outside the chapel.

Bixyl Shuftan

Monday, March 26, 2012

An Interview with Hatton Hunghi (Hatton Humphrey), Talk Show/Podcast Host

Talk shows are something people think of being on the radio rather than on the Internet or Second Life. But they can be found here on the Grid. One such show is "East Coast Conservative," hosted by Hatton Humphrey and Ken Johnson, which besides podcasted on the Internet and the Red State Radio Network and on several locations in Second Life. Hatton Humphrey is also known in Second Life by his avatar, Hatton Hunghi, and has a place for the show at the mainland Pop sim. Recently, he contacted me, and we soon agreed to an interview.

When I arrived at his location, Hatton Hunghi greeted me, "Well, this is my new 'home' in Second Life. Let me give you the tour. The first was a prefab that I shoehorned stuff into." The room we were in looked like a cozy den with a couple chairs and an American flag on the wall. He called this his basement.

Hatton paused momentarily, " One of the things that happened recently was a bit of a change in the presence of the GOP in Second Life. Much like what happened in 2007 between the pro and anti McCain folks, there are once again two different GOP groups with individual locations and events. Understand, i've been streaming the recording sessions for my podcast into SL since 2007; I've seen a lot change in the groups and support."

Hatton pointed to a wall, which had six signs on it, "This wall is something I've put up to provide 'equal access,' three groups and three landmarks. Though any group or location that wants to be on the board and fits the description can get a spot or three." With just six in the upper left corner, the wall looked a bit bare, "I'd love to see this thing filled up. But we'll talk about that more later, on with the tour!"

We stepped outside, the adjacent Second Life Highway clearly visible with an occasional bus driving down it, and walked the stairs to the top, where there was a semicircle seating stand: the theater, "It's custom built by a couple of GOP members, my building skills are about as good as my graphics. I constantly say me and graphics equals stick figures. People think I'm joking until I point out the show's logo is an example of my graphics skills … I'm a technologist and programmer by trade, graphics has never been my strong suit."

"There is some hidden technology running behind the scenes here," he pointed to the talk show's sign, "the easel with the show notes is actually part of a networked notecard giver that runs grid-wide, and there is an intercom system that will relay local chat to any other box. There are similar, though not same shaped, intercom devices in each of the other GOP locations as well as easels. What this allows me to do is host the show from here but get SL input from any place that has the easel and the intercom. The system that we use to record the podcast generates an MP3 steam that can be loaded into the audio section to Second Life. I'll spare you the sausage factory on how it works (grin). In each place it's 'hidden,' here it's the (sign) frame. … that's a programming reference - nobody wants to know what goes on in the sausage factory just like nobody wants to know the technical details of how something works. Right now all the other intercoms are probably turned off. Notice how the frame changed to full bright? That means it's on. I'm checking to see if one of the others can turn on their end."

Looking back at the audience area, "nyway, seating was a concern and the risers are all sittable. At this point I'm not sure what full capacity is." He then walked a bit to a teleporter, "Okay, the last part of the spot is at the other end of the teleporter … This is something that I just started working on." We took the teleporter to a skybox, which he called a future showcase for conservatives, "It's bare at the moment, but plans are to put links and info about famous conservatives, links to writings by the founding fathers, information about what I call "Civics 101", videos produced by another SL member, things like that."

We then headed back to the show location's "basement. " Asking him what gave him the idea to do the show, Hatton informed this was his second talk show, "he first one was a drive-rant recording called the 'Nifty Things' report to go with the domain I owned, ithinkitsnifty.com - it was a play on a blog I used to read that was ithinkitsucks.com. Podcasting allows gives you the ability to put emphasis on words and ideas that writing does not."

"The East Coast Conservative podcast actually came out of a blog site as well. I served in the Navy with Ken Johnston, my co-host on the podcast. We started off with a blog site called the 'Three-Legged Dog,' an homage to Ken's real-life rescue dog Rocky. After some time we realized we were talking more about things on the phone than we were posting on the site and the idea of the podcast came about. … We recorded our first two episodes using Skype in 2007. However because of hardware problems only the first episode was published. We 're-launched' the podcast in November 2007."

The size of East Coast's Conservative's audience can vary "wildly," at least those whom listen through podcast downloads from the Internet, "During the 2008 elections we were as high as 350-375 downloads per week. In slow times it's been as low as 65-75 per week." With the 2012 Presidential election season, ratings have picked up again, "the long run of the primaries has helped." Besides the podcasts downloads and listening in through the website and Second Life, "we have additional distribution channels. Stitcher.com carries the show as does the Red State Talk Radio network. … it's more exposure for the show, though tracking can be a bit tedious. Between feedburner, talkshoe stats, google analytics, stitcher stats and monthly reports from the radio station, keeping track of the numbers can get your eyes crossed."

Hatton first began running the show from Second Life in 2008. The sim "was the home of the 'Republican Party in SL.' They were recording a podcast of their own, Conservative Matters with Ron Skytower, and I offered to bring my show in-world as well. That was in June of 2008, episode 32, and unless there's been technical issues, we've been doing it every week since then, except for the odd Christmas, Thanksgiving or other vacation."

Of the show's topics, "We open our podcast with a funny/odd/human interest story. Over the years those have been the most fun. For example, when there were shark attacks in Egypt on the Red Sea resorts, there was an article accusing the Israelis of planting the shark near those shores. Then a couple of weeks later we opened with an article about a Romanian that was on holiday at one of those resorts, got plastered, and jumped off a pier and landed directly on a shark, killing it. So those were each opening articles. But for me the interesting articles are those that make me appreciate some kind of positive in the world, which, due to the nature of our podcast, we don't get to talk about as often as I'd like."

When asked how rough the political talk can get, "It can, absolutely, and not always in ways you might be able to directly infer. Since we depend on news articles and the occasional blog entry for our content, a slow news week can be a bit of a challenge when it comes time to put together the program. And then there are times when there are tons of things going on and I have 40-50 articles to pick 7-9 out of for the content. Generally, though, the attitude and flow that Ken and I have established over the years lends itself to more comfortable conversation. We have regular listeners from many different political areas, including liberals, moderates, conservative democrats and libertarians."

For a time, the show was at the GOP sim, "I've always wanted 'my own place' for the podcast, and had planned to make the investment when Keen closed down. The owner of Sagamore (later renamed Grand Old Party) offered me free space. I'd been toying with the idea more and more over the last 6 months or so. Then there were some changes that happened within the support structure of the groups behind that sim and the decision was made to close it. That kinda sealed the concept for me. This spot is the podcast's second true 'home.' The Cafe and the Theater on Keen before it were broadcast points. We had built a 'radio station' on GOP and I was able to put things but there was a disconnection between the information and the recording location. Here that's not the case."

Asked about visitors of different persuasions coming by, "we do get some visitors. Being so new on the mainland I'm still building up a search presence for this location. On GOP or Keen I saw so many people go by, but they were there for that sim, not always my podcast. … if they came in as griefers they probably didn't stay for very long. Griefers were not tolerated on Keen or Sagamore. Sometimes we do get comments or contact from folks that don't agree with something we're saying. If the comments are worth mentioning then I'll address them in the recording. If they're just there to be an ass, that's a different story. But that goes back to the concept that I have about debate and conversation. If one has no other response than a rude one, they're not worth making my blood pressure medication work harder and SL has this nifty 'mute' button. A freedom of speech does not translate to a freedom to be heard (grin). That's one of the joys of modern media." When asked about the "Occupy" movement, "I've had interactions with Occupy folks on other podcasts but none directly on mine. And no, nobody's occupied Pop yet."

For now, there is nothing special planned for the nomination conventions or Election Night, "Right now we are sticking with the regular schedule. … Ken and I may opt for something different as time draws nearer, however for other dates I tend to join in with a round-table of other Republican/conservative podcast hosts for a special event."

For the moment, Hatton isn't doing much else in Second Life, "In the past I was involved in various religious debates but those got a bit heated at times. I've got a lot of different real-life things going on, between band (I'm a tuba player), church, work, kids and studying for a MBA. … I've come across some interesting places in SL but none that have ever made me consider sticking around. I am a little active in the US Military Veteran group, mainly when they need someone to confirm a Navy vet in the time frame that I served. It's been interesting to watch Second Life grow over the years. It's a very fluid environment and continues to surprise me in what folks can do with it. Politics in SL is also very fluid. SL provides a microcosm in which the whole spectrum of though can be found and, when amiable, shared."

"I'm working to provide a place where folks can learn about conservatism, talk about politics in a friendly manner and relax a bit. Though to be honest that last part is the least represented in what I've put together so far. This place will continue to grow. Being a land owner is a new experience and I'm sure I've only scratched the tip of the iceberg when it comes to what can and will be done here."

Second Life's East Coast Conservative location can be found at the Pop sim at (158, 21, 68), next to the Inter-sim Highway. The website for the show is at: http://www.eastcoastconservative.com .

Bixyl Shuftan