-
Website
http://mashable.com/ -
Original page
http://mashable.com/2008/03/15/linden-lab-ceo/ -
Subscribe
All Comments -
Community
-
Top Commenters
-
Robert Basil
142 comments · 8 points
-
Jennifer Van Grove
149 comments · 23 points
-
r0cketman22
317 comments · 52 points
-
rajagiri4
160 comments · 2 points
-
barringtonarch
150 comments · 4 points
-
-
Popular Threads
-
Enter the Zappos Sharing Happiness $3,000 Shopping Spree Giveaway Contest
4 hours ago · 90 comments
-
iPhone App Offers Instant Speech-to-Text Transcription
3 hours ago · 16 comments
-
Your Next Car Radio Might Be Pandora
4 hours ago · 21 comments
-
Google Launches Chrome for Mac
5 hours ago · 28 comments
-
BREAKING: Google Launches Real-Time Search Results
1 day ago · 96 comments
-
Enter the Zappos Sharing Happiness $3,000 Shopping Spree Giveaway Contest
A startup's CEO traditionally gets out of the way once the company is stable; Philip is no different. He's a tech geek at heart, I think, and LL doesn't need that at the helm right now. They need someone that can actually run a business of 300+ employees.
With the physics upgrades, server upgrades, and client upgrades in the next 4 months, SL is back at being competitive, after management started actually cracking the whip. The next step is to come up with virtual worlds standards, and implement them.
Don't count LL out yet.
Most would view Rosedale's move as recognition that the enterprise has moved onto a more mature footing where the innovative and leftfield aspects have to be balanced by stability in the service. At present it tends to max out at around 64000 concurrent users and this is something that will need attention alongside growth in the metaverse more generally with initiatives such as OpenSim. IMHO LL can do it.
My bias, of course, is that I built a virtual Guantanamo Bay prison in SL. Perhaps you'd like to come check it out and find out how boring that is. We have done simultaneous real world/virtual world events dealing with interrogation and detainees - i.e. torture -- which was attended by avatars from around the globe.
Second Life has always suffered from its badly designed Orientation Island but once you get past that, the possibilities are enormous, especially for education.
It gives the impression of having been written by someone with no knowledge at all of Second Life who got told to write an article quickly and did so.
This story offered no actuall news on the subject it was supposed to be about.
Perhaps next time just some links to news sources would be better.