Saturday, October 4, 2008

Typing Animation in Second Life

The default method of communication if Voice is not enabled is typing in Second Life. I suppose in the interest of realism, some one programmed a typing animation into the mix, forcing your avatar to gesture wildly as he/she presses keys quickly on an invisible keyboard whenever he/she speaks.

It is a curious animation and many individuals dislike it. As with many options in Second Life, ridding yourself of it is not simple.

You need to access the 'Advanced' tab in order to do so, but that is not visible or accessible unless you 'enable' it by pressing the following keys on your real (and visible) keyboard:

Ctrl Alt D

Press the three keys simultaneously to bring up a new 'Advanced' tab in SL. You will find it at the top of your screen to the right of the 'Help' tab.

Now you need to enter the text that will allow you to disable the typing animation. To do this, go first to 'Debug Settings'.

You need to type 'PlayTypingAnim' in the box, but if you begin to type the word 'Play', often the rest of the text will appear as it is one of the most common settings that people change.

When it is entered in the box, you will see 'TRUE' is the default setting. Change that to 'FALSE' and you can close the box.

From this point, your avatar will be able to type in Second Life without being seen to do so!

N.B. If you are a dramatic sort of individual who likes his/her avatar to be in motion constantly but wish to change the actual mode of animation, you can purchase animations that cause your avatar to write in a book or scroll either with a contemporary pen or a feather quill... or any number of other alternatives. I personally find this a little overly dramatic but some avatars love it.

Wednesday, January 23, 2008

William Gibson in Second Life



Last autumn, William Gibson made an appearance in Second Life, giving a reading from his most recent novel, 'Spook Country'. 'Neuromancer', an earlier book of his, is one that I consider a sci-fi classic. Some comments about 'Neuromancer' are included in this video.

In an interview with Amazon.com, William Gibson actually spoke of his responses to the world of Second Life:

Amazon.com : Speaking of virtual multiplayer worlds, have you visited Second Life at all? I know that you're doing some promotions for the book there.

Gibson: I'm going to do something there, and it'll pretty much be the first time I've been there since I did go and check it out last winter. It was a strange experience.

Amazon.com : Did they treat you as a god there?

Gibson: Well, I didn't go as myself. I went as the guy that I cooked up when signed up, so nobody knew it was me. And actually it was like a cross between being in some suburban shopping mall on the outskirts of Edmonton in the middle of winter and the worst day you ever spent in high school.

Amazon.com : Yeah, I have to say I've visited the outskirts and it frightens me.

Gibson: It's deserted. It seems like functionally it has to be deserted. If it's not deserted it crashes. So there's all this empty, empty architecture. There's whole cities where there's only one other person and they don't even want to get close to you. And when you do succeed in finding a group of other avatars, people aren't very nice.

Amazon.com : They're meaner than they are--it's like people are in their cars.

Gibson: Yeah, they're meaner than they are in the real world. There may be other places that I haven't seen...

Amazon.com : If you had said who you were, you would have been one of the popular kids, I imagine.

Gibson: Yeah, but then you don't get to find out what it is. But who would have believed me? And who could have know that, because a part of my frosty reception was that I set all of the avatar's sliders in the opposite direction than I assumed most people would do. So I wound up being this grotesquely overweight, bright blue smurf. In a tutu. Nobody thought that was cool. You know what really worried me about Second Life? Is that after I'd spent maybe like four or five hours checking it out last December, I was walking around in the Christmas shopping crowds here, and every so often I would see somebody from Second Life walking down the street. There are people, always well under 30, who look like they've escaped from Second Life.

Amazon.com : They dress like an avatar.

Gibson: Yeah, they dress like an avatar, they're built like an avatar. It's a very spooky thing. And I think somewhere in my file of lines for fiction there's one about a guy, his girlfriend looks like he found her in Second Life.