Fashion Research Institute's Shengri La

Entries tagged as ‘IBM’

IBM Signs Services Agreement with Fashion Research Institute

October 9, 2008 · Comments Off

New York, October 9, 2008  –  IBM (NYSE: IBM) today announced it has signed a multi-million IBM Global Business Services agreement with the Fashion Research Institute (FRI)  to implement a first of a kind Virtual World Product Lifecycle Management (PLM) Enterprise System. 

Fashion Research Institute, headquartered in New York, NY conducts research into technology-based initiatives and develops emerging technologies to overhaul traditional fashion practices and methodologies. FRI’s mission is to reduce the carbon footprint and change the environmental impact of the industry in ways that are sustainable, replicable, respectful of the practitioners, and meaningful for all stakeholders.  FRI maintains Shengri-La, a five-island complex in Second Life, and an OpenSim complex.   

“We’re proud to pioneer the first big business solution that leverages the OpenSim virtual world platform to address economies of scale.” said Shenlei Winkler, FRI. “The Fashion Research Institute understands how to design real world consumer goods using a virtual world environment, and IBM understands the scaling challenges of global enterprise. Taking on both simultaneously is a winning move.”

 

This virtual world enterprise solution, expressly created as a product design environment, will offer a fundamentally new work flow addressing critical issues facing the design industry, such as ensuring manufacturability of designs and decreasing substantial sample costs by two-thirds.   Users of this solution will ultimately be able to enter a virtual world, receive training on the systems, and take a design from concept to prototype – with every step short of actual manufacturing being done virtually.  

 

This first-of-a-kind system will allow fashion and consumer packaging designers to access and use 3-D tools with the Second Life client interface. In addition it will also connect to the OpenSim virtual world platform to create packaging and fashion products, provide efficient workflow queues, and allow groups with an interest in the product to collaborate and modify designs.  The program will also generate virtual product samples and accurate factory specifications that enable high quality product mass-manufacturing in the real world.

 

FRI will offer an IBM-backed and co-developed enterprise solution providing a simpler and more intuitive user interface than currently existing design-industry-oriented software including scalability for businesses of all sizes.  Users of the IBM-built technology could see product sample creation costs and time to market decrease dramatically. 

 

The initial proof-of-concept solution expected to go live in 2H09 will be piloted with up to 20 international design houses.  Ultimately this solution will be offered as a design service or enterprise installation, to creative industry design houses of all sizes globally.

 

“As the Fashion Research Institute continues to enhance the IT capabilities of the fashion and consumer packaged goods industries, IBM’s deep knowledge in product design, enterprise systems, and virtual worlds, will help FRI bring new market opportunities to the fashion world,” said Jeffrey Russell, IBM Global Business Services.  A design house implementing this solution could reduce dozens of weeks of design time, minimize the number of physical samples manufactured, and increase product manufacturing quality enough to put into development and production many additional collections”.

 

The initial agreement was signed in March 2008 but was expanded in August 2008 to include consumer package design.

 

 About the Fashion Research Institute

Fashion Research Institute conducts research into technology-based initiatives and develops emerging technologies to sweepingly overhaul traditional fashion industry practices and methodologies.  FRI’s mission is to reduce the carbon footprint and change the environmental impact of the industry in ways that are sustainable, replicable, respectful of the practitioners, and meaningful for all stakeholders.  FRI maintains Shengri-La, a five-island complex in Second Life, and an OpenSim complex.  FRI is an IBM business partner, and has been working closely with top IBM architects and researchers over the last year to develop its virtual-worlds-based product design solution. For more information, please visit www.fashionresearchinstitute.com.

 

About IBM

For more information, visit www.ibm.com.

 

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Categories: Fashion Research Institute · OpenSim · Shengri La · avatar apparel · fashion · secondlife
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Black Dress Technology Hires Justin Clark-Casey as Lead Developer

August 4, 2008 · 2 Comments

NYC, NY, August 5, 2008 — Fashion Research Institute, Inc. (FRI), announces the hiring of Justin Clark-Casey as lead developer for its Black Dress Technology subsidiary. Beginning September 9, he will be responsible for managing all aspects of technology and development for Black Dress Technology.

 

Clark-Casey was most recently a Software Engineer in Information Management at IBM UK. In that position, he was part of the team responsible for the development of the IBM InfoSphere Master Data Management Server 8.0 and WebSphere Product Center 5.3. He is a core developer for OpenSim, a virtual world platform which can be used for creating and deploying 3D virtual environments compatible with the Second LifeTM protocol. Black Dress Technology’s apparel industry PLM solution is distinct because the apparel designer performs her work in a fully integrated enterprise virtual world based on the OpenSim platform.

Clark-Casey is pursuing a Masters of Science degree in Software Engineering from Oxford University, and has a Bachelors of Arts in Economics and Econometrics from the University of Kent. He writes about OpenSim development and related issues at justincc.wordpress.com. He is based in Hampshire, England.

“As one of the top contributors to OpenSim, Justin brings a deep understanding of the OpenSim platform and its capabilities, and the skills to adapt it to the specific needs of Black Dress Technology and our customers,” said Shenlei Winkler, FRI’s CEO. “The fact that we ourselves operate in a virtual environment means we can have the best talents working on our projects – whether they’re on the East Coast of the U.S., the South Coast of England, or anywhere else.”

Black Dress Technology is developing an end-to-end enterprise solution for virtual-worlds-based product design for the apparel industry in conjunction with IBM, its parent company’s technology partner. Users will ultimately be able to enter a virtual world specifically developed for apparel and accessory designers, receive training on the systems, and take a design from concept to prototype – with every step short of actual manufacturing being done virtually.

Fashion Research Institute conducts research into technology-based initiatives and develops emerging technologies to sweepingly overhaul traditional fashion industry practices and methodologies. FRI’s mission is to reduce the carbon footprint and change the environmental impact of the industry in ways that are sustainable, replicable, respectful of the practitioners, and meaningful for all stakeholders. FRI maintains Shengri-La, a five-island complex in Second LifeTM, and a nine-island OpenSim complex. FRI is an IBM business partner, and has been working closely with top IBM architects and researchers over the last year to develop its virtual-worlds-based product design solution.

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Categories: Black Dress Technology · Blogroll · Fashion Research Institute · OpenSim · Shengri La · fashion · secondlife
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Introducing OpenSim Shengri La Dream

June 17, 2008 · 1 Comment

First View of Shengri La Dream

First View of Shengri La Dream

Shengri La Dream emerged from the protosphere over the weekend and landed next to Shengri La Spirit.  I show the first views of Dream, which will be used to develop content and to push on the inventory aspects of OpenSim. 

One of the first things I’ll be doing is dumping in a lot of my textures that I’ve developed over the past three years so we can start to develop a reasonable sized avatar inventory.  Then I’ll start developing a range of mesh garments, skins and of course, prim-based content such as jewelry, shoes, and other attachments.

This will allow us to find the functional limit of OpenSim and start getting some performance benchmarks as I build out and add to my inventory.

Looking at Spirit from Dream

Looking at Shengri La Spirit from Shengri La Dream

Categories: Blogroll · Fashion Research Institute · OpenSim · Shengri La · secondlife
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OpenSim Supporters from IBM and Microsoft Rave On in Shengri La

June 15, 2008 · 1 Comment

If you couldn’t make it last night, you missed a great large-scale immersive 3D event in virtual worlds in the Fashion Research Institute’s Shengri La sims in Second Life.  Over and above the fact it was another one of our typically cool, visually compelling rave parties with a fantastic music stream laid down by DJane Qee Nishi, what made last night particularly interesting was that we had OpenSim supporters and developers from both my technology partner, IBM, and from Microsoft and its partners. 

Not unlike pounding the first stake in the transnational American railroad system, this casual social gathering stands as a critical point in the evolution of the open source OpenSim development movement. 

Of course, for those of us who were there, we enjoyed the excellent tracks laid down by Qee, the fantastic outfits so many attendees put together, the witty repartee and occasional innuendo without being deeply impressed with the historical significance of the event.  The usual IBM partiers were joined last night by developers and OpenSim supporters from Microsoft and one of Microsoft’s partners, G-Squared.  G2 Proto (Kyle Gomboy – as mentioned in Tish Chute’s article on her UgoTrade blog) was kind enough to stream the event, live, from Shengri La to Snowcrash TV.  Kyle will have clips of the event available sometime later, so even if you couldn’t be there last night, you can see what you missed.  Plus, of course, snaps of some of the attendees…

DJane Qee Nishi is UP!

Garythegoat Raving in Style

Need…More….Particles

 

G2 Proto Looks Shocked
(But check out those wings!)

Chestnut & Zha Ravin’ in the Air

Calli’s New Wings

Script Wizard Dale & Harper

Blank Cleanslate, IBM OpenSim Island Manager

Various Ravers~!

A Greener Solution

Utopians Midrave: Rez, Chestnut, Calli, Zha, and Me

Go, Jess!

Awesome Rave Outfit!

Minions or Baby Junques? You Decide!

Ravers Raving on

Scientist Troy McLuhan Performs WaveLength Experiments

Michelle Has Great Wings

Frequent Raver Kate Nicholas and RobinG from G-Squared Rave on!

 A Nice Array of Wings

Rose Queen in a Prim & Proper Frock

Woo Hoo! Blue!

Ravers Eva Bellambi and Kate Nicholas

Another Fashionably Attired Raver

Raving Hip Hopper!

A Very Cool Outfit

A great time was had by all. Here’s to a bright future for OpenSim, and the day we hold our first rave in our IBM-hosted OpenSim.  Get your Avatars ready, cause it’s coming, just a matter of time.

Hope you can join us next time, when we host the SteamPunk Rave in Shengri La! 

Categories: Blogroll · Fashion Research Institute · OpenSim · Shengri La · art · fashion · micronation · science · secondlife
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Raving Utopian Lunatics and Ode Hunters…

May 20, 2008 · 1 Comment

To round out our festivities this week (new artists, a few moves around the sims), we hosted a five-sim wide Ode Hunt and one of our (now legendary) Raves for our IBM collaborators. 

DJane Qee Nishi is Up! Up! Up!

Monarch Wings Everywhere!

The hunt for Ode-containing butterflies was a real delight to watch.  Five sims, with green dots spasming all over them, and getting tangled up with the butterflies already in place in Shengri La – well worth the price of admission.  I stood atop the Bridge of Dreams and watched it all.

Monarch Me And Rez in His Ghod Suit
 

Utopian Chestnut Rau Waves Her Wings

Later, when we finally wound the hunt down, we opened the Monarch Rave.  Attendees threw themselves into the spirit of things, with attendees in outfits from the everyday to the wildly exotic. 

Calli Looking Lovely

The particle effects were fierce, the DJane fab, and in short, a great time was had by all. Our next Rave is Saturday, June 14th: A Midsummer’s Night Dream.  See you in Shengri La!

Particle Madness 

DJane Qee Nishi

Kate Nicholas Shakes a Wing

Butterflies, Bees and Wild Things, O My!

 

Particles Are Up! Up! Up!

Sez Zebelin Gets Wild

Garythegoat is a Dragon That Flies…a Dragonfly?

Pretty Flowers Are Up!

Ravers Match The Particles!

Our Particle Bill Is Stupefying (We’re Told)

 Flower Bells and Mushrooms

Categories: Blogroll · Fashion Research Institute · Shengri La · art · fashion · micronation · science · secondlife
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Where’s Your Data?

May 16, 2008 · Comments Off

I’ve received several comments with wild-eyed claims and various anecdotes about OpenSim, including a recent one about a simulator with a build of 100,000 prims. Folks, this entry is for you.

While I’m waiting for Spirit to be groomed and tweaked and made ready for my next assault, I’m going to take the opportunity to talk about why we’re doing what we’re doing.  The Fashion Research Institute didn’t actually set out to be alpha testers of open source code. 

As CEO of the Fashion Research Institute, I’ve done my due diligence about virtual worlds. I personally have explored all of the virtual worlds out there in the last year of developing the Fashion Research Institute, and our virtual world-based product design and development technology solution.   But after a hot-eyed tour of the many virtual worlds out there: Blue Mars – stunningly beautiful.  World of Warcraft - lots of users.  Stardolls? Shopping for the tween set…and the many other worlds out there…it became crystal clear that none of the existing virtual worlds was going to be what we needed for our solution.  

These virtual worlds all had issues, not least of which is that most of them are games.  Entertainment for the marketing demographic of choice, which means we can’t use it for our solution - the Fashion Research Institute isn’t serving the media and entertainment industry.  We’re building an enterprise-ready virtual world-based technology solution. 

There’s nothing playful about it, unless you regard business like Edith Wharton: “He had the Saxon love of games, and the best game of all was business.”  We’re in business in the apparel industry, and part of our business demands that we have an appropriate platform.  As I’ve reiterated at my many talks, the real value proposition for virtual worlds isn’t in marketing or serving the consumer base.  It’s in helping enterprises succeed at their business by using virtual worlds to enable their work flow – at which point, the consumers will follow.

The Fashion Research Institute was facing a dilemma.  Second Life tm has graphic quality that is ‘good enough’, and a richly immersive experience.  But Linden Labs’ tm Terms of Service agreement alarms me as an entrepreneur.  It’s fine for individuals, but an enterprise that is serious about their business information and intellectual property would never allow their proprietary information to sit on a Linden Lab server. 

And then, OpenSim was presented to me as an option.  It was an option that was ringed and garnished with a lot of cautious warnings like ‘well, you know, this is very alpha code’, and so on.  And at the point where I first went in, in October of 2007, it really was quite rocky.  But it was also very clear that it was our future, and I’d better embrace it.

And to that end, I had my people set up the first of our OpenSims, and we started playing with them.  I now have the abandoned ruins of four or five OpenSims laying about on my boxes, and of course, Shengri La Spirit alive and well on an IBM-hosted Blade.

Fast forward to where we are now: testing the code.  And, I’d like to think, doing a service to the OpenSim community, and in the spirit of open source, making our data available for everyone to see and use, in the form of this blog, and feedback from Kurt, Sean, Dale, and Zha into the community.  Open source means just that: being open about what you are doing, and showing your work.  Being transparent about it, so everyone can benefit. 

For example, I’ve had a lot of technologists tell me that the prim limit in OpenSim is arbitrary.  I am first and foremost a visual learner – I like to look and see for myself….and that means actually seeing the  performance limitations for substantive builds.  Now, it is true, I could have just asked my IBM team to create a script that would have rezzed prims in a loop till the system ground to a halt.  It wouldn’t really have impressed anyone, particularly those who write loops. And we wouldn’t have learned anything in the process – a machine cannot alpha test because it isn’t human and it does not have the sensitivity to learn from the experience.  All it would have done is dumped in as many prims as it took to grind the machine to a halt. 

But having a server full of prims, with no active observer, or worse yet, an observer who is unable to log and report what she observes, really doesn’t serve any useful purpose.  You can’t actually learn where the FUNCTIONAL prim limit is – you know, the one where the overall user experience degrades to the point it becomes unacceptable to the human user – a clearly human condition that a program can never identify. 

So we’re building out to find and push the functional prim limit, on a specific box, and we’re benchmarking the performance of that machine, with the given installation, and with a lot of user parameters being fed back.  I make no secret about the fact that we’re performance tuning as we go along; that we are not yet pushing textures, inventory, scripts, or a range of other parameters (that’s coming, soon enough).  We’re systematically focusing on prim limits first, which in our case is a human-created substantive build that uses primitive-based objects, including basic system, tortured system, sculptured or flexible primitives.

And we’re going to keep running out onto the ice until we fall through, at which point we will know where the functional prim limit is, for this set of parameters, and we’ll push it further.  When we find that functional prim limit based on our parameters, tuned for the IBM Blade hosting it, we will have a benchmark, which we will share so that the OpenSim community also has that benchmark. 

And this is why Spirit is so important.  Benchmarking performance, and sharing our data.  If you, my reader, have done something awesome with your OpenSim and you haven’t shared your data….well, anyone can SAY they did something.  But in the Spirit of scientific exploration, if you haven’t shared your data, you’ll forgive me if statements about ‘what you did in your OpenSim’ aren’t received as anything more than your marketing material to be circular filed. This is an open source community effort, and in that Spirit, I’d ask you, “Where’s your data?”

I’m not clearing space on my calendar to beat on Spirit because I love games or alpha testing.  I’m doing it to move the platform forward, because alpha testers who can actually test and provide worthwhile feedback are tough to find.  And I’m talking about our work because I feel strongly that the results of my alpha testing are important to the community as a whole, and that there are some very dedicated and capable people out there who will grab the results of what the Fashion Research Institute is doing in our collaboration with IBM, and run with them. 

Personally, I cannot wait to see the results.  Thank you again, to all of the dedicated open source & OpenSim supporters, coders, programmers and technologists who share their work openly and publicly.  You rock.

Categories: secondlife
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MOAR Prims! 41,802 prims in IBM OpenSim Shengri La Spirit

May 14, 2008 · 3 Comments

Sunset over IBM OpenSim Shengri La Spirit

I got a little excited about planting the island on the southeast corner of Spirit, and before you know it, I ended up with 41,802 prims.  I honestly meant to have more self control.  But, it didn’t work out that way.

Ooo!

Spirit was a trooper and performed valiently, although I did notice that she was a little laggy towards the end, and didn’t really want to have anything to do with terraforming, especially not the smooth tool.

41,802…nice number.

Dumping stuff out of inventory wasn’t a problem, other than the one about how a prim or an object gets buried up to its center point in the ground.  It’s not as bad as when your legs are suddenly bent at odd angles because of the terrain physics. 

I would love to see a better basic set of animations for the basic avatar. I really do miss my AO, but at least if the basic walk animation didn’t so closely resemble the stride of a chicken, it mightn’t be so bad. 

Showing the small island

I was told that attachment points are now persistent.  I guess we’ll see.  If they truly are, then I’ll likely slack on dumping in content to Spirit and start focusing on, well, hair.  And shoes.  Shoes and hair.  And jewelry.  And maybe a nice matching handbag.  It would be nice if the attachments themselves were persistent but I guess little steps for tiny feet.

Meditation spot on IBM OpenSim Shengri La Spirit

Teravus, I totally forgot to get the sim stats until long after I had logged for the day. Sorry about that,  I’ll try to remember tomorrow when I go in to build.

Mushrooms and grass

Today was a pretty good build though, overall. I finished off the corner of the sim, and started looking at the northeast corner. I have a plan in mind for a relatively complicated gazebo and some plantings.  We’ll see how it goes.

Final count for today’s efforts: 41,802 prims.

 

 

Categories: Blogroll · Fashion Research Institute · OpenSim · Shengri La · fashion · secondlife
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Oops, I Did It Again: 34,559 prims in Shengri La Spirit

May 12, 2008 · 3 Comments

Shengri La Spirit Gets Its Groove On

Ok, ok, I know I promised I’d only dump a few hundred, max a thousand prims into Spirit at a time, so we could look at things.  But it’s so difficult to stop when you have prim cattails and prim mushrooms and bunny fountains and crystals just waiting to be planted. At least it is for me.  Your mileage may vary on this.

Sprit just got its terraforming done – harder to do that you’d think, given the terrain editing tools and the fact that things in OpenSim are still a little exciting (the wild west of virtual worlds!)

OMG! Only 10,000 prims left!

I’m starting to get a little worried.  I only have 10,000 prims left to go, and I haven’t even tackled the back island…or the sea floor.  And I want tea sets, and a lot of them.  It’s troubling to think I may run out before I see my vision fully instantiated.  O, the pain!

A Picture is Worth 34,559 Prims

Heh. Somehow, Spirit is just so comforting when the main SL tm grid plummets like a wingshot duck.  It’s just there, with its own issues, but issues that are getting wrung out every day that passes. I wish I could say the same for the main grid.

The Path to the Sacred Grove

So tonight I went ahead and planted a few trees, finished the Sacred Grove, and added a few special touches here and there.  My favorite has to be either the prim cattails or the cave of crystals. 

The Sacred Grove

I can’t wait for our official photographer to get into Spirit.  She did manage a brief log-in, and I discovered a really unique bug. I was trying to im her, so I clicked on her…and got the edit menu…and axes.  So being the curious sort, I decided to see what would happen is I dragged the arrows around.  Yup, you guessed it: her avatar came along for the ride, all around the sim, courtesy of an edit gone badly awry.  Given that its little feet are peeking out from under the curtains, I think we can classify this as a bug.

Bunnies!

Hopefully tomorrow we’ll see Calli in and snapping away.  She’s so talented, I know she will do justice to Spirit in all ways, especially its historic nature.

Bunny from the fountain

I’m hoping that I’m going to get my promised ’surprise’ this week, and Spirit can catch a breather and have a bit more tuning done.  It’s very exciting and I just can’t wait!

Shengri La Spirit and Her New Terraforming

So the rolecall at the end of the day: 1/2 Calli, 1 Shenlei, and 34,559 prims in Shengri La Spirit!  Yay!

Shengri La Spirit, Day’s End With 34, 559 Prims

Categories: Blogroll · Fashion Research Institute · OpenSim · Shengri La · art · fashion · secondlife
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The Dilithium Crystals Canna Take…30,280 prims

May 11, 2008 · Comments Off

Sunrise over Shengri La Spirit

I finally managed to shake off my executive cares and figured I’d have time to go in and start the climb to the next 5,000 prims.  That is one must confess, a really lovely idea. But, Spirit had other things in mind and for whatever reason, the last few days in Spirit has been more like a crash-and-burn every hour or so, sometimes less.  Bleeding edge, ok, check, got it.

Nuff said!

The installation was wonkier than a high school freshman (I have a nascent one of those around the house, so I know from).  Since Zha gives me a fresh build with all the new patches and updates everytime I crash the box, I’m always assured I’m working on the most recent code with the most recent patches.  Which is usually pretty cool – I noticed, for instance, that the weird linking anomaly where the center of a set of linked prims defaults not to the combined center, but to the center of the root prim, has been fixed.  Thank you, thank you, thank you to whomever of you fabulous code Ghod/desses who fixed that particular issue.  Awesome work!

Strange anomaly!

I managed to crash the box about 6 times Friday, once so hard it even brought the Blade down (as opposed to just the OS installation).  I always feel horrible when I crash the system.  The entire process of getting it back up is time-consuming. I can’t ‘just’ hop back in after the system goes down like that.

Staging for landscaping in Spirit

On the other hand, I did manage to generate a really interesting experience.  I was in shooting a machinima (with a great deal of alt-camming and mousing around) and I crashed Spirit so hard the dust is still settling.  After getting it back online, I went in and managed to, after alt-camming a bit, crash it again (not so hard this time).  There is something about the process of ‘looking’ with alt-cam that causes the system to hang.  I look around a lot with alt-cam.  I do it more than I move my avatar, in fact.  I’m always way out away from my av, building, and doing a lot of camming.  That combination seems to be lethal after a certain amount of time/clicks/looks.  Although that may be tied in with alt/click/looks and a heck of a prim load.  Tough for me to say where the issue is or what it is exactly, I just report on my experiences out there on the thin edge of the ice and hand my notes over to my IBM team liaison, Kurt. 

Sculpti trees!

The machinima, by the way, is beautiful.  I’m not the world’s best at taking pictures or machinima, but the subject matter is lovely, and in the windlight moonlight, it’s superb.  Even with my bad camera shots.  As soon as I figure out how to edit it and convert it, I’ll post the first moving images of Spirit, complete with all of its scripts and prims.

Now, the good news: Zha managed to stabilize poor hemorrhaging Spirit and get it back on its feet.  So I was able to get back in yesterday evening and get back on track with building towards 45,000 prims.  As you can see, we’re now at 30,280 prims and heading into the ascent.   The top terraformer on my crack IBM team is heading in tonight to tweak terrain and then I’m going to go head’s down on landscaping.  15,000 prims will be a snap to consume with such features as my 600 prim bunny fountain….

600 prim bunny fountain: NPISL

Prim count star date 5/11/2008: 30,280 in IBM OpenSim Shengri La Spirit.  Yay!

30,280 prims in a sim: especially NPISL

Categories: Blogroll · Fashion Research Institute · OpenSim · Shengri La
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Shengri La Events

May 7, 2008 · Comments Off

Meanwhile, back on Shengri La, life hasn’t stopped.  We have a new resident on the islands, Chestnut Rau.  Welcome to Chestnut, I hope she enjoys her tenure with us.

We also have several events upcoming, including the opening of Calli’s newly re-designed art gallery, The Gallery at Shengri La.  Calli is our official photographer of all things Fashion Research Institute and we have been very fortunate to have her talent documenting the growth and changes of Shengri La.  As an FRI collaborator and Utopian, we’re looking forward to seeing what she can do in Shengri La Spirit in coming weeks, but for now, I hope you will join us Thursday, May 8, 2008 at her gallery in Shengri La

At the very least, stop by and check out her innovative gallery design that features the carefully sculpted hands of another of our featured artists, Pumpkin Tripsa.  Pumpkin’s work can be seen all over Shengri La in the form of gargoyles and mermaid sculptures.

Also, on Saturdays, we have our regularly scheduled vintage marketplace, where new designers can show their work, for free.  Set up starts Friday evening, prims are returned on Saturday evening at 5:15 pm SLT, and vendors are limited to 20 prims to be contained within the marketplace tents.  No adult content, no BIAB, and above all, nothing that infringes anyone else’s copyright.

Upcoming on May 17th, we’re very pleased to host Random Calliope and his legendary butterfly hunt.  Random is a longtime friend and we’re very pleased to be able to support his work by opening our five sims for this purpose.  His manager, Elizabeth Tinsley, told me she’ll be releasing 5,000 Ode butterflies on Shengri La’s sim so there should be plenty for everyone.  As a side note, to assist Elizabeth in setting up, we will be closing and locking the Shengri La sims (Shengri La, Shengri La Love, Shengri La Joy, Shengri La Hope, And Shengri La Peace) starting at 4:45 pm SLT on Saturday, May 17th.  We will open the sims promptly at 6:00 pm SLT and the hunt will begin.  Please feel free to pick up a landmark from the sims in advance of the event from one of the landmark givers.  Utopians will be unable to provide limo service.

Immediately after the Hunt, we’ll be hosting a Monarch Rave, one of our irregularly scheduled events we host for our IBM technology partners and other collaborators.  Please join us on the visually lush Shengri La sim for 3 hours of psytrance by DJ Qee Nishi. Raving music starts at 7 pm SLT.  Dress is butterfly, monarch, Monarch butterfly, fairy, or any other cool thing you care to wear to dress to impress.  Rave on in our special homage to the Monarch butterfly; visit early to the dance platform and pick up your party pack or join our event group, IBM Parties On! for up to the minute information about events we host.

Also that weekend, we’ll be hosting two new artists who will be opening their shows in the Small Gallery and in one of the other galleries located on Shengri La.  More about this as we are closer to the big day!

More information on the Ode Butterfly Hunt: Over the weekend of May 16-18, 2008, there will be a massive migration of Random Calliope’s Ode Butterflies through Second Life. Commencing on Friday, May 16 from the Science Friday sim, the Ode butterflies will wind their way throughout SL to commemorate the opening of the North American Monarch Butterfly Exhibit at the Science Friday sim and in general raise awareness of the awe-inspiring real life annual North American Monarch Butterfly migration.

Random Calliope is a creator of wearable art. He is a master craftsman and the work that he does with microprims is truly breathtaking. He has been creating jewelry in SL for almost three years and while he has created pieces that have fetched some truly awe inspiring sums for charity, what may be equally impressive are the pieces he creates simply to give away.
 
Ode, and the butterfly hunts that allow one to get it, is a homage to the once very popular community butterfly hunts of days gone by. Proper gentlemen and gentlewomen would pack their picnic baskets in the spring and summer and head off to the nearest flowered field. There they would use their butterfly nets to capture prized butterflies of infinite variety.

The Ode hunts are done just the same way. The community gathers in a field of butterflies and tries to catch them. They may be in trees, floating around, in the grass, or anywhere a butterfly might be found. The hunts work in this way. Pieces of Ode jewelry are put in selected butterflies and then released in a pack of decoy butterflies. There is a script contained in each butterfly that allows it to fly in a random pattern around the sim. When the hunt begins the participants need to find and click on the butterflies to “catch” them. 

Ode is an 8 piece jewelry set (hair piece, earrings, necklace, pendant, brooch, bracelet, ring) which at this moment has 22 color variations. The challenge is to complete full sets of one color for your Ode butterfly collection; however, Ode pieces can only be obtained through participating in Ode Butterfly hunts and/or through trading with other collectors. New varieties of butterflies are occasionally added and some variations such as the Platinum and the Shades of Golden are extremely rare. 

To stay informed of when the Ode Butterfly Hunts are beginning please join the Ode Butterfly Collectors Subscription group by clicking on a kiosk at either Random’s WorthWhile Gallery in Ode or the Science Friday sim.

For More Information in Second LifeTM Contact:

Bjorlyn Loon, Science Friday
Elizabeth Tinsley, for Random Calliope Second Life 

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