Ars Technica (Art of Technology blog) reports that Google is prepping it's own entry into the field of Virtual Worlds, potentially named "My World". Students at ASU (a school Google has a strong working relationship with in the past) this weekend received questionnaires that "hinted strongly" at the possibility that they would be among the first to test such an app later this year.
(Screengrab of the questionnaire courtesy of the MacRumors forum).
A logical step for Google, given that they've already made a foray into Virtuality with Google Earth.And a significant move, not because it's just another virtual world for people to choose from, but because it is a mainstream tech giant adopting what some decry as little more than a passing fad, and it's yet further evidence that a 3D internet is the next logical progression of our digital lives.
A few snippets from the article:
"The notion that Google might test the new service with ASU students isn't very outlandish, then, so the question is more a matter of what the service will be rather than if it will come to fruition."
"To us, it seems that a virtual world is natural progression of Google Earth and its 3D representations of... well, the Earth. Users could create avatars, like those in Second Life. The "street view" feature of Google Maps could be incorporated, as well as Google SketchUp, with avatars being able to walk around on actual streets and enter real buildings to check out what's inside and socialize with other avatars. But the purpose wouldn't be to rival Second Life and all of its fantasy, sex, and moneymaking schemes."
"Whatever "My World" ends up being, we think that Google will go much further than just competing with Second Life—if the company makes it functionally useful and ties it in with services that people already use, it may have a chance of succeeding at getting average Internet users to participate."
Share ideas that inspire. FALLON PLANNERS (and co-conspirators) are freely invited to post trends, commentary, obscure ephemera and insightful rants regarding the experience of branding.
Tuesday, September 25, 2007
Virtuality: Google Planning to Launch "My World"
Posted by
avin
at
9/25/2007 03:35:00 PM
2
comments
Labels: 2L, Brave New Medi, Brave New Media, Postcards from Second Life, Virtual Worlds, virtuality, what's next
Monday, September 24, 2007
Virtuality: Social Media in 3D
Caught a post over on adverblog about the launch of a new social networking site for your virtual self, Koinup. The site allows you to connect all of your virtual world experiences in one network- your activities from Second Life, World of Warcraft, The Sims all in one location, where you can post content of your adventures (video of a recent SL trip for example) and browse through the virtual lives of the sites other members.
This brings an interesting new layer to all of the talk around virtual worlds. KoinUp elevates the discussion above "worlds" and highlights the trend that our online activity is increasingly becoming virtual, so much so that we now need a social web to bring together all of the virtual identities that define us in the digital space.
I just came across this (thanks Aki) and while interested, still haven't quite decided where I see this going and how "big" it may be. Any readers out there more familiar and care to weigh in? For those of you in virtual worlds, do you see yourself social networking your virtual identities? Are you so dedicated that, in addition to maintaining Facebook, MySpace, and your other real world social webs that you would start a virtual side?
Posted by
avin
at
9/24/2007 01:08:00 PM
0
comments
Labels: 2L, Brave New Medi, Brave New Media, Postcards from Second Life, Social Media, Social Networking, Virtual Worlds, virtuality, what's next
Tuesday, July 31, 2007
Mass Interactive: Diddy Does Web 2.0
Music mogul Sean Combs is looking for an assistant, but don’t send a résumé. The star is accepting only video applications uploaded onto YouTube.
Mr. Combs, known as Diddy, videotaped a help-wanted ad on the popular video Web site hoping to find a helper to replace his former assistant, who did everything from holding his umbrella in the rain to playing chaperone to his hip-hop group Da Band.
While Mr. Combs declined to comment on why he chose YouTube instead of a job-recruiting site like Monster.com, he offered some explanation in the video.
“It’s a new age, new time, new era,” he said in his first posting, a minute-and-a-half clip of him yelling behind his desk. “Forget coming into the office and having a meeting with me and being all nervous.”
Hopefuls must audition by posting a video that is less than three minutes long explaining why they deserve the job. Initially, Mr. Combs opened it to anybody with a camera or a little creativity, but in a second posting, narrowed the applicant pool to only college graduates.
More than 600 people have submitted videos.
John A. Challenger, chief of the recruiting firm Challenger, Gray & Christmas, said Mr. Combs’s online video search is more than a ploy to get attention. More applicants are adding video clips to their applications. “It helps put a face to all the faceless résumés,” he said.
Viewers will pick the finalists on YouTube, but Mr. Combs will pick the winner.
via http://www.nytimes.com/2007/07/30/business/media/30diddy.html?_r=2&8dpc=&adxnnl=1&oref=slogin&adxnnlx=1185813074-52mdpT6NH85/h6f6Qj20WQ&oref=slogin
Posted by
AKI SYSTEMS 2600
at
7/31/2007 08:43:00 AM
0
comments
Labels: Brave New Medi, Mass Interactive, Politics 2.0, Social Marketing, Social Media, Social Networking, Web 2.0