Molaskey's Pub News


Mia KitchensinkMolaskey's Pub Host, Mia Kitchensink recently had a rez day on November 2. For those of you wondering what a 'rez day' is, it is the Second Life® equivalent of a birthday. This was Mia's 3rd rez day. With all the activities we have going on, Mia's Rez Day passed without much fanfare at all. Our apologies to you Mia, it certainly is no reflection of how important you are to the group. In fact, you are the glue that keeps Molaskey's Pub going. Your dedication, positive attitude and love are deeply appreciated. Your friendly nature and outgoing personality has made Molaskey's Pub so attractive to many newcomers and returing guests.

You have done some exciting things in the past three years online. You helped us launch the Pub, launch the book, recruit members, plan parties, host countless events, you have so many great ideas and enthusiasm; We can't possibly thank you enough. You have several accomplishments to be proud of, including a mention in the New York Times Magazine, 'The Unofficial Guide to Building Your Business in the Second Life Virtual World', volunteering at the SLCC two years in a row, and you've attended several real world meet-ups.

Thank you Mia for being such an important part of our lives, both in Second Life and real life.

Happy belated rez day.
Hugs!

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A friend with whom I have had many face-to-face conversations over the years recently asked me about online jargon and instant communication methods so commonly used today. Though I have been thinking of it for sometime, this particular inquiry brought the topic of modern communication to the forefront of my mind. There are dozens of people that I communicate with everyday that, for one reason or another, stand out as having great online skills. They not only know how to access things with ease, they also possess a highly valuable skill in conversation that I admiringly call, 'the art of chat'.

For those of you still familiarizing yourself with life online, 'chat' is a live conversation you type while online. It is commonly called 'instant messaging' ('IM'), 'room chat', 'group chat' or 'personal message'.  Unlike 'surfing the Net', where you simply go page to page, read content and fill out blank forms with hopes of a response, 'chat' usually results in a (an immediate) response from another person where you can conduct a type-written conversation.  The exchange of information through 'chat' is instant and to the point. Keeping track of WHICH window to type in takes some getting used to, especially when you have several windows open at once. My inquiring friend was uncertain if the private chat from Facebook could be read by everyone. It's a valid question for newcomers to social media. "No", I explained, "You can see who, of your friends, is online. When someone is online, you can click their name and a new private chat line with that person opens on your screen. You type words and hit 'enter' to instantly send it to them, and they can do the same to you. Chat is the equivalent of email in real time. It is a conversation between just you and that particular person." I think my friend understood. Chat takes skill, to some degree.

The term 'chat' may intimidate novice online users. "Who are you chatting WITH?” most want to know, suspicious of nare-do-welling, I suppose. Well, the answer to that is, 'Whomever!’ I have several contacts exclusive to my life online. I admit, that has to do with writing an Internet business book, but I maintain several friendships online, too. Facebook has been especially good with dredging up old friendships. Second Life has helped me form many new friendships. I really like knowing that I can instantly drop anyone a message or a link to something of interest at almost any time. Type-chat conversations are rich with humor, emotions and quick exchange of information.

With risk of overwhelming a majority of you just getting comfortable with 'chat', let me explain that it is possible, and quite common, to have multiple, independent, simultaneous conversations on various topics with one person at a time, or with an entire group. Discussions can go on for mere seconds or over a lifetime. Once you begin to master using the 'chat' function, you will understand this online tool much better. For instance, you may have a conversation with a potential client happening in one window, keeping things on your utmost professional level, while a good-time friend tries to persuade you out on the town. A group that you belong to may post a message about an event, allowing immediate group response. Whenever we have an event or announcement at Molaskey's Pub, our messages reach about a thousand people or more. We use a certain tone and language when posting official pub messages, but when we tap into the Molaskey's Pub group chat, the language is noticeably different because it's a LIVE conversation with several hundred people online at the same time! Chat appears on screen the moment it is sent. No one is required to respond, but those who want to chime in, do. Chat communication is like nothing humanity or society have experienced ever before. In fact, we are at the dawn of a new era of interactive, social media. It's not too late to develop your online language by any means.

Voice and body language has long been the root of human communication, but these days, we 'type-chat', too. Type chat has successfully communicated information, emotions, humor, drama, and entertainment using regional dialect and popular slang since the introduction of the Internet in 1989. I personally started communicating through chat on the Internet in 2006, when I took up Second Life®. Instant messaging and 'room chat' fascinated me. I learned to use them quickly. At the time, I felt I was a 'late bloomer' to online conversation, but I realize now how relatively early to the gate I arrived.

One quarter of the Earth's population regularly use the Internet. Most of them are just now warming up to the idea of having an avatar of their own and engaging with others in a real time online space. This is a skill to be developed at a personal rate, but don't put it off much longer. With all the people and cultures around the world, those with the 'Art of Chat' have an advantage. This may be greatly due to a streamlined language of technology bonded by popular culture.
 
Conversation skills are radically different these days. It used to be that people had to explain common online acronyms. That is hardly the case any more. Most people are hip to LOL, brb, ttyl, imho, etc. Though not always, I tend to use descriptive, humorous and powerful words in chat conversations, adding an occasional acronym and smiley face.  Type-chat is empowering in many ways. Type chatting can be 'character building', and the content of one's character is an important facet of relationships, in person or online. In fact, I remarked several years ago that my husband has an attractive online presence. He types the right things in the right ways, portraying an energetic disposition and a sense of humor rarely seen in person (ha-ha! Sorry, hun. Just kidding!) The point is, this is as much a form of personal communication as it is a form of global communication. We, as the human race, are no longer confined to hand written, physical or voice forms of communication. Online conversations in the form of ‘chat’ are leading the way people communicate across the Earth. There are different languages and dialects around the world, dictated by regions and cultures. In many ways, culture and dialect varies across the Grid, too. It just depends what platform you're using.

'Platforms' are Internet programs designed with a particular function. They include Second Life, World of Warcraft, Facebook, etc. The Internet also provides us with games, virtual worlds, business meeting sites, social networks and e-mail, all with 'instant messaging' features. Most online users around the world understand how to navigate the Internet. Search engines are essentially our directories. Every topic of interest can be found at your fingertips. Handy mobile devices make it easy (and fun) to tap into information on the Internet several times a day. It's fast, reliable and informative.  It's the Information Age, for certain, and the human race is finally publicly embracing a new style of communication.

Unlike face-to-face or phone interaction, type-chat conversations online include awkwardly long pauses and wonderment of attention. Multitasking is assumed. Manners and social queues in 'chat' still go a long way, when used properly. Online conversations flow as easily as a phone conversation. We talk about 'netiquette' and social queues in our book, 'The Unofficial Guide to Building Your Business in the Second Life Virtual World'. There is an unspoken necessity of practicing social graces while online. This is true for simple conversations, too. 'Chat’ is a part of life online, and life online is here for generations.

Whether you are a casual user or are carefully sculpting an online presence, having the keen ability to maintain small talk and online chat will improve your overall online experiences while enhancing conversations with friends, old and new.


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I was recently asked, for the umpteenth time, "What's so special about Second Life®?" The answer to that question usually leads to a long, open-ended answer that generally includes collaborative qualities, amazing interactive experiences and long list of characters we call friends. Millions of people not only 'get it' but deeply love using Second Life. The fact is, Second Life is many things to many people. It is a social outlet, it is an interactive substitute for television, it is musical and theatrical entertainment, it is a fantasy world, it is a business opportunity, it is a 'place' to meet, it is a place to create, it is what you want it to be. My answer to the question, 'What's so special about Second Life' usually generates wide-eyed expressions followed by babble. In my three plus years of using Second Life, I have yet to come up with a succinct answer to the common question that would explain it well enough to the average and above average person. If anyone out there has suggestions, please share them. I wish I had it in time for the last time I was asked the question. It was for PBS. 

 

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Robert69 Little shot 2 videos at Molaskey's yesterday.

JueL Resistance aka Suzen Juel

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and Rhyme Melodie

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great job Robert69,

thanks AM


Has Second Life® positively impacted the real world like we imagined it would? We (approximately 16 million of 'us') have created an amazing, functioning virtual environment complete with ecosystems, communities, commerce and relationships that would never have formed any other way. We have redefined entertainment and expanded the minds of millions of people with the potential to create and produce far outside the proverbial box. Impact the world? Definitely. Did it happen the way we expected? That depends on your particular timeline. Things are still happening.  

Entrepreneurs and established businesses made a living, or in the very least, took a shot at it. Universities established themselves in Second Life, defining their particular uses for it.  Government agencies have found the value in Second Life, too. But, is the 3D virtual world of Second Life EVER going to catch on with the mainstream user the same way Facebook has? The answer: Not the way Second Life currently is. It’s so much more complex then typical 2D social media. Only a relatively small number of online users competently understand HOW or WHY to use SL™, and that's holding things up for those of us in SL™.

The most amazing thing about Second Life is that we HAVE it. Eventually, we’ll all learn how to USE it to our potential.  (Ahem, sounds a bit like Pip in Charles Dickens’s ‘Great Expectations’, doesn’t it?)

While in San Francisco this summer, Jay and I had lunch with Philip Rosedale on the eve of his SLCC Keynote Address.  The three of us chatted for nearly two hours about Molaskey's Pub, our book, some of SL's history, places to go, we talked a bit about groups what they're doing, we talked about my 2008 interview with him in New York and then the conversation moved on to digitally-born business and social media in general. At some point during lunch, we talked about Second Life's complexities and why mainstream users are struggling to accept the same SL™ we all know and love. Radical change was in the air during that lunch. I could feel it. While sitting in the trendy San Francisco restaurant that afternoon, at some point, or two, I looked around to see if anyone was leaning in on the conversation at our table. They weren't, of course, I was just having fun at the thought.  

The next day, in his keynote address, Philip spoke of the evolution of Second Life and the revolutionary changes that will surely come. Change is not always easy, but it is necessary to evolve for survival. Evolution is gradual and continuous, like people and society. Revolution is a movement of the people and society. Revolution is sometimes necessary to hasten progress. It can be unsettling, or exciting, depending on what side of the coin you call. Adaptors know when they can't beat them and therefore join them, sort of speak. All of these things are happening in the digital world right now.

Philip recently announced he would be starting a new company based on the evolutionary foundation of Second Life. That's revolutionary. Pip has us wondering what this new company will be.  What ever 'it' is, it is expectantly revolutionary.


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Yoko Ono, the widow of music legend, John Lennon will dedicate the 'Imagine Peace Tower' in Second Life® to her beloved husband. The dedication in SL™ will take place on October 9, 2009, which would have marked John Lennon's 69th birthday. Coincidently, the couple's son, Sean Lennon, born in 1975, shares his birthday with his iconic father.

This dedication is symbolic of the peace, music and spirit of John Lennon that continues to reach millions of people around the world. Second Life is an effective 3D platform on which to promote peace, harmony and the human spirit. See Yoko Ono's message about the dedication here. This location in Second Life gives millions of people online the opportunity to connect directly with John's message of peace and understanding in a changing world.  "Imagine all the people living life in peace", indeed. 

Through the years, John Lennon has been a universal symbol of life the way we all wish we could live, music that speaks to all of us, and unrelenting peace and worldwide fame. Rolling Stone magazine listed Lennon among "The Immortals: The Fifty Greatest Artists of All Time". So true. Yoko Ono's decision to use Second Life to carry the torch for John Lennon's message is newsworthy and encouraging, especially for those of us in the SL Music Community.

Peace.
 

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The owners of Molaskey's Pub in Second Life are offering a small shop for rent close to the Pub! Just go to the Riverwalk section of the neighborhood and see the shop across from the Kitchensink Chronicles. You may use up to 75 prims in this charming space. It's very affordable at L$400/wk Simply click to rent!

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