Categories: Blogroll · Fashion Research Institute · OpenSim · Shengri La · fashion · secondlife
Tagged: apparel industry, Fashion Research Institute, IBM, OpenSim, second life, Shenlei, virtual worlds
The one really, really nasty thing about alpha testing is, you really do need to have the patience of a saint. No, not me, my TEAM. We’re tuning Spirit, and I think I crashed it 15 times today. Hard. Sometimes within seconds of logging in. Zha came and hung out with me for awhile and watched things progress, so I could feed bug reports on the spot. This made things go quicker from my point of view….no less exhausting, but quicker.
An OMG moment, as I log in from what felt like my 92-millionth crash, to discover that I had lost most of an entire wall of trelli…and what was there had partially reverted to original parameters, the deadly “plywood box” unit.

What’s really interesting is how you can FEEL the box start to respond to the tuning as changes get made to
it. By the end of the day, I was mostly running into known bugs (linking and texturing issues, mostly) and Spirit performed admirably through a stint that brought us to 6,000 prims. I did note something about the lack of an RGB slider when you go into the edit window – you have to use your existing palette. (this is a bug, in case my earlier comment to Zha went unnoticed)
The theme of Spirit has changed – as these things so often do – it’s moving more in the direction of a community center nestled in a large trellised glasshouse. Today I fought with the technology all day and built trellii. I must have rebuilt one section five times, because it just wasn’t persistent. But, we got it worked out, and by the time I was tired of trellii, I had the walls in place.
Then I turned my attention to plants – flowering vines, some system plants potted up, and a few other odds and ends.
A whole squadron of butterflies awaiting their flight scripts (um, guys? please?)
Script Wizard Dale made some mutterings (imprecations?) about the flame script. A flame script would be really nice. Also a particle script or two. And some texture animation scripts. And, oh yes, attachments? I miss my hair. No pressure, next week will be fine.
In one of my interims waiting for Spirit to get kicked, our liaison found me in SL. Thanks for coming with me to the networking event, Kurt, that was fun. I actually had far more company today in working on Spirit than I usually do. Zha popped in and out and at one point, retextured the terrain. Not that this build is going to have a lot of terrain, but what there is will be lush and lovely.
Anyway, after a hard day of wrestling technology, we have a really quite lovely build. I am particularly fond of the chandeliers, even they do just sort of prestidigitate. They make me want to hold a Rave….
Categories: Fashion Research Institute · OpenSim · Shengri La · fashion · science · secondlife
Tagged: Fashion Research Institute, OpenSim, Shengri La, Shenlei, virtual worlds
Fashion Research Institute Announces Formation of Black Dress Technology Subsidiary
NYC, NY, April 08, 2008 – Fashion Research Institute, Inc. (FRI) has launched a subsidiary, Black Dress Technology (Black Dress), to develop an end-to-end enterprise solution for virtual-worlds-based product design for the fashion industry in conjunction with IBM, FRI’s technology partner.
Black Dress will provide a virtual world experience specifically developed for apparel and accessory designers. This virtual world, expressly created as a product design environment, will offer a fundamentally new work flow addressing critical issues facing the fashion industry, such as ensuring manufacturability of designs and decreasing substantial sample costs by up to 60%. In addition, this “green” solution reduces the carbon footprint of the fashion industry. Users of the Black Dress 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.
Black Dress will offer an IBM-backed and -developed enterprise solution providing a simpler and more intuitive user interface than currently existing products, apparel-industry-oriented software, and scalability for businesses of all sizes. Users of the technology could see sample creation costs decreased by 60% and time to market cut by as much as six weeks per collection. Additionally, management and executive staff can have access to real-time business statistics so they can make immediate, informed decisions. This technology solution was showcased in the IBM booth at the National Retail Federation Show in January 2008.
A mid-sized design house implementing a Black Dress Technology solution could save millions a year in sample costs and dozens of weeks of development time, enough to put into development and production one full collection or two mini-collections. This, in turn, could allow this company to generate additional tens of millions a year in gross revenue.
Black Dress’s board currently includes Jeffrey Safran, president, Antares ITI; Richard M. Fine, Ph.D., principle, Biopredict; and Theodore Buyniski, Esq., SVP, Radford. Black Dress is also being overseen by FRI’s CEO, Shenlei Winkler. Winkler brings more than 20 years of fashion experience and has designed both virtual world and real world fashion with annual sales of more than $30 million. The roster of Black Dress Technology officers has not yet been announced.
“Black Dress will be competing in a $1.7 trillion global industry, where the rapid turnover of in-house IT systems clearly tells us there’s a huge need for an improved solution. We intend to deliver that solution, in a way that serves the unique needs of both the creative design staff and executive management. In fact, we see our solution as finally allowing management to monitor and manage the previously unmanageable design process without disrupting the delicate creative process,” said Winkler.
Black Dress’s parent company, 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.
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Categories: Fashion Research Institute · OpenSim · Shengri La · fashion · secondlife
Tagged: fashion, fashion plm, Fashion Research Institute, second life, Shengri La, virtual worlds