When two avatars are talking on Second Life, a barrier is placed between the two people because they are talking as avatars, rather than being face to face. To fix this, Second Life could add a video feature that would allow people to talk face to face, especially in academic situations. This would allow residents to not only hear the person they are talking to, but it allows them to also see the person they are talking to which brings another one of the senses into the mix. This would increase the opportunities vastly for education because meetings can become lectures and classes could even be held in Second Life.
The skepticism of many people may still block the potential that Second Life has as a mode of communication. I think that many people don't use virtual worlds for communication or networking because it is so new, and new things and ideas tend to scare people. For example, in the 1920's when cars began to become common all throughout the United States, many skeptics thought that they were a nuisance and added to the corruption of youth. Some even called them "rolling brothels". Yet, the car has become the most commonly used form of transportation amid the skeptics that tried to stop it.
I have no doubt that virtual worlds will become a ubiquitous form of communication, and that it will find commonplace in the daily lives of many people. Once many of the barriers and skepticism have settled, virtual worlds will become a place for people to meet and do many other things.
You are a mind-reader :)
ReplyDeleteGo to my blog (yesterday's post) for a link a post about the topic of video-feeds in place of avatars. Here it is, directly. Note that I ran my big mouth, too:
http://deepsemaphore.wordpress.com/2008/09/22/some-thoughts-about-identities-avatars-surrogates-and-video-conferencing-leading-to-video-bubbles/
My concern is that "video bubbles" won't interact well at something immersive like Burning Life.
I love how you saved yourself from The Brick with "new things and ideas tend to scare people." I was about to hop up and down, saying "Which people?? Why? Not my friends...we sold our stuff and moved to Europe when we got bored with our stupid jobs in the 80s."
The qualification you make, good enough for a blog post, is credible.
This is another reason to follow the post I mentioned (I could not paste in the URL here).