Monthly Archives: August 2006

Pourquoi les hommes ne chantent pas

[en]

If you like singing in French, we're looking for male singers (in particular) for the vocal group I'm part of, Café-Café. We rehearse on Wednesday nights in Lausanne.

[fr]

Hier, première répétition de la saison à Café-Café, après le week-end de travail aux Paccots de ce week-end. Deux nouvelles, toutes motivées, mais pas de nouveaux.

Pourquoi je dis ça? Parce qu’on manque d’hommes. On manque d’hommes au point que ça pourrait commencer à devenir un problème. On est un choeur mixte, mais avec 4 basses et 7 ténors (comptés mercredi) pour un groupe d’une septentaine de personnes, ça commence à devenir chaud.

J’ai commencé à recruter activement autour de moi. Au judo, hier soir aussi, avant d’aller à la répète.

  • Tu chantes?
  • Moi?! Euh… non, et puis je chante faux.

En discutant avec des copines de Café-Café, c’est un peu le même constat partout: les hommes ne chantent pas, ou en tous cas chantent toujours faux.

Refusant de croire que nos hommes sont génétiquement programmés à ne sortir que des fausses notes, j’ai mis en marche mon petit cerveau, et je suis arrivée à l’hypothèse suivante, que j’ai testée sur quelques personnes qui l’ont trouvée fort séduisante. Mais permetez-moi d’abord un petit détour par mon histoire.

J’ai toujours aimé chanter. Mais seule. Avec la musique à coin dans ma chambre ou le casque sur les oreilles, sur mon vélomoteur, dans ma voiture, quand il n’y a personne dans le coin. Ou bien alors en camp scout autour du feu, quand tout le monde s’égosille et qu’il ne s’agit pas de chanter bien, mais de chanter tout court.

En parallèle de cela, j’ai toujours pensé que je chantais faux. Voyez-vous, je me basais pour tirer cette conclusions sur les seules démonstrations de chant publiques que j’avais faites. Je vous le donne en mille: les interrogations de chant à l’école quand j’étais adolescente.

Je ne pense pas qu’on m’ait jamais dit que je chantais horriblement faux. Par contre, quand on est seule debout au piano devant toute la classe, qu’on essaie vaguement de chanter quelque chose qui est trop haut, le trac au ventre, pour être évaluée, bien sûr qu’on s’entend dérailler.

Pour ma part, il a fallu que je passe par une succession d’étapes (vraiment m’écouter chanter dans la voiture pour constater que ce n’était pas si mal que ça, karaoke avec les copines, d’abord avec puis sans Martini, puis finalement prise de courage à deux mains pour aller m’inscrire dans un choeur) pour arrêter de penser que je chante faux. Allez, j’ai pas la voix la plus juste du monde, je dis pas ça, mais je crois pouvoir dire que je chante suffisamment juste.

Et les hommes dans tout ça? Eh bien.

Je pense que chanter faux, c’est en grande partie dans la tête. On croit qu’on chante faux, alors on se gêne, et en effet on chante faux. On croit qu’on chante faux, donc on ne chante jamais, et en effet quand on essaie c’est pas terrible. J’ai entendu quelque part qu’à moins d’avoir des problèmes d’ouïe (suivez mon regard… j’en ai!) tout le monde peut apprendre à chanter juste. Je ne sais pas à quel point c’est vrai, mais je reste persuadée qu’une grande partie des personnes qui se définissent comme “chantant faux” ne chanteraient en fait pas si faux que ça si elles arrivaient à faire un pas dans leur tête et chanter dans des conditions favorables (pas tout seul sur un scène pour commencer, par exemple).

A mon avis, les hommes souffrent en grande partie de ce que j’appellerai “le traumatisme de la mue”. A l’heure des interrogations de chant à l’école, nos pauvres garçons sont en train de muer. Catastrophe! C’est sans doute bien pire pour eux que ce que j’ai vécu. A moins d’adorer vraiment chanter, ou d’avoir un peu de technique de chant, je suis persuadée que beaucoup de ces adolescents en viennent simplement à s’étiqueter “je chante faux” pour le reste de leur vie. Quel gâchis de belles voix d’homme!

Alors, messieurs. Posez-vous la question. Essayez de chanter seuls dans votre voiture (avec la radio ou un CD, parce qu’a capella c’est bien plus difficile). Affiche recrutement. Et dites-nous dans le commentaires: quand avez-vous commencé à penser que vous chantiez faux, si tel est votre cas? Je crois qu’en quatrième année, il n’y a pas plus de petits garçons que de petites filles qui chantent faux. Si vous avez d’autres théories sur la question, je serai ravie de vous entendre.

Et messieurs de Suisse Romande, sachez que tous les mercredis soir à 20h, à Pierrefleur (sur le Grey, près des Bergières, sortie Blécherette), on se retrouve pour chanter. On fait de la chanson française Nougaro, Fugain, Aznavour, etc, on n’est pas ringards, la moyenne d’âge est de 45 ans et notre benjamine en a 26, on est sympas et (avis aux célibataires) il y a plein de femmes :-).

Pour la pub plus musicale, nous sommes dirigés par Pierre Huwiler (ce qui n’est pas rien) et notre prochain concert, après le succès de Chéserex, aura lieu à l’Auditorium Stravinski de Montreux. En clair, pour un groupe vocal amateur, on a vraiment un bon niveau, même si pour venir chanter avec nous il n’y a pas de pré-requis côté technique de chant, lecture de partitions, etc.

Vous aimez chanter? Venez!

Au minimum, venez nous voir le 24 novembre sur scène à Montreux

PS: on ne refuse pas les dames, hein, surtout si elles sont Soprano II (très haut!), mais on a vraiment vraiment besoin d’hommes…

Tentative de JotSpot

[fr]

Briefly tried JotSpot. Pity the trial version is limited in time, and that you then have to shell out between $10 and $200 per month to keep on using it. It's not encouraging me to try it out, because I don't really intend to start paying for it in two weeks.

[en]

Gabriel m’avait déjà fait découvrir Flock, un navigateur web basé sur Firefox mais avec plein d’additions sympa pour blogueurs. La dernière fois qu’on s’est vus, il m’a dit d’essayer JotSpot.

J’ai ouvert un compte juste maintenant, et trois minutes après, ça a l’air assez sympa. Ombre au tableau cependant: ma version d’évaluation gratuite va durer encore 13 jours, après quoi il faudra que je sorte entre $10 et $200 par mois. Je sais pas vous, mais moi ça me coupe un peu ma motivation de jouer avec.

Chez Flickr, par contre (un service photo que je vous encourage vraiment d’aller essayer tout de suite), le compte gratuit n’est pas limité dans le temps: ils ne limitent que le nombre de nouvelles photos que vous pouvez mettre en ligne chaque mois. De quoi ouvrir un compte et y passer 5 minutes maintenant, avant de l’oublier pendant six mois et de se mettre soudain à l’utiliser parce qu’on a acheté un appareil photo numérique.

Liberté d’écrire

[en]

I've been feeling increasingly less free to write here (that's not new, can't remember when I first said it). Maybe the huge category list is guilty.

[fr]

Je crois que ça m’est déjà arrivé de dire ça ici, mais j’ai la flemme de rechercher le billet. Je me suis rendue compte (e ou pas de e à rendue? j’oublie toujours) en écrivant des “bêtises” dans mon BleuBlog que je limite mon expression sur CTTS. Trop peur d’écrire des banalités. Pression que je me mets d’être à la hauteur. Je suis en train de devenir une de ces horribles personnes dont je me suis parfois moquée qui “écrivent pour leurs lecteurs” avant tout.

Eh bien mince. Je veux récupérer le droit d’écrire des articles moins longs (car je tartine, n’est-ce pas) et des critiques pas forcément fouillées jusqu’à la dernière virgule.

Je sais, j’ai “tous les droits” ici — ce n’est que de moi-même à moi-même que ça coince un peu.

Je crois que la monstrueuse liste de catégories dans ce blog n’aide pas. Allez savoir pourquoi, mais ça me bloque. Il faut vraiment que je fasse du triage. Mettre à jour Batch Categories par exemple.

Trying WPMU

[fr]

Très bref compte-rendu de mon installation de WordPress multi-utilisateurs, la version sous laquelle tourne WordPresss.com, qui existe d'ailleurs maintenant en français. Jetez-vous dessus!

[en]

I gave WordPress Multi-User a try (that’s the version of Wordpress that Wordpress.com runs on). Took me roughly half an hour to install from start to finish, then about an hour or two of diluted DNS/vhost troubleshooting until I was told to add ServerAlias *.wpmu.domain.com to the vhost file.

I installed the theme pack, and I think I got my technorati tags and basic bilingual plugins working (not 100% sure because I haven’t tried using the template tags yet). PHP Markdown Extra works but only if you activate it at blog-level.

I have great ideas about creating a “bunny-approved” package of WPMU now :-)

Travel Plans

[fr]

Prochains voyages: Lisbonne puis Vienne à la fin du mois de septembre, et peut-être l'Inde cet hiver si j'ai les sous.

[en]

  • (25)26-30th September: Shift in Lisbon, Portugal
  • 1st-3rd October: BlogTalk in Vienna, Austria

I’ve more or less got the trip to Lisbon and the return from Vienna sorted out. I’m in trouble for getting from Lisbon to Vienna during the week-end without emptying my bank account. Anybody else doing this? Got ideas where I should look? (Trains, planes, coaches?)

I’m also tempted to go to India for two months over December-January (get back here in time for Lift early February). The problem there is finances: I don’t know yet if I’ll be able to afford it. One idea would be to try and get some consulting work over there (Delhi, Pune, Bangalore…) — if the rates in the industry are worth it. Anybody know what opportunities a videshi bloggy consultant might find there?

Do speak up if we’re going to be in the same place at the same time!

BleuBlog test

[en]

Testing a blogging platform.

[fr]

Il y a très, très longtemps, après avoir passé une bonne journée ou deux à tester la nouvelle plate-forme Romandie.com (ils ont viré mon blog depuis, tant pis), j’ai ouvert un compte chez BleuBlog.

Je viens de passer un moment dessus et je m’apprête à tester la publication par SMS.

Monthly/Weekly Calendar Improved

[fr]

Une amélioration du planning que je me suis fabriqué. Les semaines sont verticales (plus logique vu que le temps file verticalement durant un jour). Il y a une version française en PDF.

[en]

Screenshot of calendar days. I barely started using the calendar I created for myself that I’ve already made some major interface changes: most significant being that I’ve shifted the weeks from horizontal to vertical view. You still get four months on a single sheet of paper, but you have to hold it the other way.

The reason for this is that time inside a day flows vertically (morning things at the top of the day box, evening things at the bottom). It makes more sense for me to have the next morning straight below the current day’s evening. This means I lose an “at a glance” view of “all my mornings this week” or “all my evenings this week” — but I’m glad to sacrifice that for some temporal continuity, and an easier view of “my next Tuesday afternoons”.

I’ve also revised the six little lines used to fill up the days: two large ones for a.m. and p.m. (marked as such), one fine one for lunch and supper, and another not-so-thick one for evening. On my version of the calendar, I’ve also pre-filled regular weekly commitments (judo, singing, etc). The screenshot shows you what it looks like.

Here is the new version of this calendar (version française). If you want to edit stuff, get the Open Office 2 version.

Bridging the gap between me and orthodox GTD

[fr]

Je note ici quelques divergences entre le système d'organisation que j'ai mis en place et ce que recommande directement le livre "Getting Things Done" (comme il ne semble pas qu'il existe en français, j'en parlerai -- peut-être de vive voix -- plus longuement à l'occasion).

[en]

(Whatever “orthodox” GTD is, to start with.)

I started to try to hack together some implementation of GTD based on what I had read at 43folders, and, I have to say, I didn’t do too badly. I’ve now received The Book and am starting to read it. Of course, there were some missing elements I’m now understanding, and I’m preparing to set aside enough time to start implementing a good system for myself. Roughly 2 days work to gather and process all the “open loops” in my life — most people I talk to tell me they would have expected more time was required, but I still think it’s a lot of time when I look at my overbooked calendar. Still, I’m really looking forward to doing it, and I already know it will be worth it.

For the moment, I’ve noted the my filing system isn’t really DA’s-GTD-compatible: I use 26 hanging folders, and stick translucid folders (labeled! I got that bit right! love using my labeler, in fact!) under the right letter. But I’m already noticing that letter C is bulging (don’t ask me, but clients as well as administrivia tend to collect under the letter C). I’m not going to get a hanging folder for each file (way too expensive), and even the cardboard (manila-type) folders we can get here don’t really come cheap. The transparent plastic ones are really nice, but I’m not sure they’d stand up on their own.

In addition to that, the box I’m storing them is a bit deep, and I had to line the bottom with the lid of another box to have the daily folders of my tickler file stand upright at the right place. I’m not quite sure which solution I’ll come up with. How much do manila folders (A4 size) cost, and can I order them online without the shipping fees killing me?

Another huge gap I’ve noted is that I store the tickler and A-Z reference in the same box. That’s not going to be enough space for very long, so I’ll have to go and buy other boxes to store on/under the desk.

Also, I’ve been noting “action items” on small index cards (A8), and DA suggests using a whole sheet of paper per item. I’m looking forward to reading through chapter 7 to understand where that comes in handy. I’m also looking forward to figuring out good lists to use, and of course, going through the initial collecting phase (though I’m a bit frightened I might end up putting my whole flat in the inbox).

Will keep you posted.

Quelques balises HTML pour blogueurs

[en]

A few HTML tags for bloggers. Don't use the visual editor is my recommendation. It sometimes creates hairy problems.

[fr]

Je recommande en général de ne pas utiliser “l’éditeur visuel” lorsqu’on écrit des billets dans WordPress. L’éditeur visuel vous montre directement, dans le texte que vous écrivez, le gras en gras, les listes sous forme de liste avec des petits points devant, les liens en bleu souligné, etc. Malheureusement les éditeurs visuels sont imparfaits et génèrent souvent plus de problèmes qu’ils n’en résolvent.

Pour désactiver l’éditeur visuel, allez sous “Users/Utilisateurs” et puis sous “Your Profile/Votre Profil”. Tout en bas de cette page, il y a une case à cocher. Vérifiez qu’elle soit décochée, et mettez à jour les réglages.

Votre éditeur de billets est maintenant décoré d’une rangée de boutons un peu différente d’avant: sélectionnez du texte, cliquez sur le bouton approprié, et des caractères étranges apparaîtront de part et d’autre du texte que vous aviez sélectionné. C’est du HTML. HTML?! Pas de panique, c’est pas si compliqué. Voici ce que vous avez besoin de savoir:

  • le HTML, c’est en fait des petits “codes secrets” qui disent au navigateur de formatter d’une façon particulière le texte qu’ils entourent (par exemple: mettre en gras, faire une liste, faire un paragraphe, faire un lien).
  • ces codes secrets se nomment “balises”. Les balises vont toujours par deux: une qui ouvre, une qui ferme.

Exemple:

<em>du texte mis en italiques (emphasis)</em>

Ce qui est entre parenthèses angulaires < et > ne va pas s’afficher dans votre texte. Ce sont juste des indications que va interpréter le navigateur web. En l’occurence, il mettra le texte ci-dessus en italiques.

Voici quelques balises que vous rencontrerez en utilisant les boutons de WordPress:

  • <em> ... </em> met le texte qu’elles délimitent en italiques
  • <strong> ... </strong> en gras
  • <a href="http://quelquechose.com"> ... </a> crée un lien qui nous enverra sur http://quelquechose.com si on clique dessus
  • <ul> ... </ul>, <ol> ... </ol> et <li> ... </li> sont utilisés pour faire des listes (explications ultérieures).

Weekly/Monthly Planner

[fr]

Un agenda mensuel fait sur mesure (4 mois sur une page recto-verso).

[en]

When my iBook last broke, I found myself yet again withough my Calendar (I was using iCal religiously). I did two things: I started using Google Calendar, and I bought myself a very small and thin paper planner (my handbag tends to be in a permanent burst-at-the-seams mode).

Yesterday, I decided I needed more writing space on my planner, so I made myself a custom monthly planner [14K PDF] (get it in Open Office 2 format [8K]if you want to play with it). It’s still a 0.1 alpha version so it can certainly be muchly improved.

It holds two months on each page, so by printing back and front you get four months on one sheet of paper. Keep the first column for weekly stuff and notes. Write the days of the weeks in the top row (month in the first cell). Add date (just the day!) in the corner of each square. There are six lines in each day to make it easier to organise stuff (two for morning, two for afternoon, two for evening, or however you please).

If you download it and make improvements, be sure to share them with us!

Getting Rid of www

[fr]

Une recette pour faire disparaître magiquement ce satané "www" des noms de domaines que j'héberge...

[en]

I personally hate having “www” in front of a domain name. It’s redundant. If we’re visiting a website, we’re on the web anyway. It also brings no end of problems when people start writing for the web and creating links, because they think that what makes something a “website address” is the “www” in front if it, instead of “http://”. That’s how they end up with links like “http://example.com/www.yahoo.com” on their sites. But I digress.

On one of the sites I manage, we have a restricted members-only area. However, our users started reporting that when they used “www” in front of the domain name, they were being asked for the password twice. I tried myself, and I was simply asked for the password ad aeternam. Probably a server configuration glitch somewhere.

Anyway, I decided the simplest solution was to redirect all “www” requests to the non-www domain. I know I had that in place for CTTS at some point, but the setting must have got lost at some point. Instead of sticking rewrite rules in .htaccess as no-www.org suggests, I modified my vhost configuration slightly so that it looked like this:

<VirtualHost *:80>
ServerName example.com
DocumentRoot /home/example/www/
ErrorLog logs/example-error
CustomLog logs/example-access combined
</VirtualHost>

<VirtualHost *:80>
ServerName www.example.com
Redirect permanent / http://example.com/
</VirtualHost>

Try it!

http://www.cafecafe.ch/

Many thanks to those who gave suggestions and nudged me along the way to this solution.

Culture Shock in Second Life

[fr]

Second Life est vraiment ressenti par ceux qui l'utilisent comme un espace physique. Preuve en est le sentiment de désorientation qui m'habite alors que je découvre cet espace -- sentiment très proche de celui qui a accompagné mes premiers jours un Inde: un choc culturel. On trouve également dans Second Life des problèmes de racisme. A mon avis, un terrain fertile pour mieux comprendre, par exemple, comment l'utilisation de jeux vidéos interactifs (comme WoW) peut agir sur nous.

[en]

After my first few hours inside Second Life, I realized that the confusion I was feeling was very similar to what I had experienced when I first arrived in India: I was suffering from a culture shock.

There were people all around me that looked like nothing I’d ever seen before. I had trouble communicating (I’d try to chat and I’d fly up in the air) and identifying what I saw in my surroundings. I didn’t know where to go. I read notes which mentioned places which ringed no bells. I just didn’t know what to do or where to start.

But what really rang the “culture shock” bells for me was that I was feeling anxious and afraid of the avatar-people around me. I feared somebody would pounce on me (well, my avatar, but by then the identification process had kicked in), or animate my avatar against my will, or start shouting obscene things at me. I felt pretty insecure and vulnerable amongst all these people with masks on their faces. I had no idea what to expect from them, just as I had no idea what to expect from people when I landed in India.

In India, I was afraid to go out by myself and explore. In Second Life, I get some of that feeling too. I’m afraid of ending up in “bad places”. Talk of griefers and guns makes me scared. So I tend to hang out in the New Citizens Plaza a lot. (Note: if you click on that URL, you’ll be shown where that place is on a map of Second Life. If you’re running Second Life, you can click on the “Teleport” button to go there. Doesn’t seem to work for me, though.) Then last night buridan showed me to Joi’s island Kula (fun stuff there with merry-go-rounds and dancing floors).

The interesting point here is that I’m exploring Second Life space just as I do real physical geographical space. I find the same patterns in my behaviour. Same with activities that do not match anything in my life experience yet: flying, teleporting — I don’t tend to do these things much yet, just as it took me a while to start taking rickshaws on my own, queueing to get somebody else to photocopy (”Xerox”) documents for me, and fend off beggars efficiently.

Second Life is much more than “chat with graphics”. As I told my Grandma on the phone yesterday, when she asked me what on earth my last posts were about, it’s almost like an “internet inside the internet”. There are chatrooms in it, but they are informal and transient: put a few people in an open space, and if they gather and start talking, you have a chatroom-like atmosphere. But you can walk/fly/teleport away, do your hair or build/program stuff while the others talk. All that without leaving Second Life.

As a long-time IRC chatroom inhabitant, I see two major differences between what I’m used to and Second Life.

From the chatroom point of view, first of all, you cannot be in two places at once inside Second Life. On IRC, I sit in way more than one chatroom at a time, and it’s not uncommon for me to be conducting conversations in two or three chatrooms at once. In Second Life, you can send private messages in parallel to the “physical group conversation” you’re having, but you can’t have more than one group conversation.

Another “quality” of Second Life that strikes me is that it’s less “partial-attention-friendly” than text-only chat or instant messaging — or even web surfing. I find it very hard to do “something else” at the same time as I’m in Second Life. I think it has something to do with the graphical nature of Second Life, and how rich an environment it is. There’s enough material inside Second Life for partial attention as it is :-) — but also, the fact there is a graphical representation of the people you’re chatting with helps capture one’s attention. (Maybe I feel things this way because I’m new to Second Life, I might think differently later on.)

So, even though Second Life is an entirely on-the-computer thing, it clearly activates the pathways in our brains that we use to deal with physical space and beings. I’ve already said many times that the internet is broadly perceived as “space without space”, but it’s much more obvious in Second Life. Another element that shows us how “real” this virtual environment is to our brains is the presence of racism in Second Life. The topic came up when I was talking to a few “Furries” (ie, people with an animal-like avatar) who mentioned there were “furry areas” because Furries were often subject to discrimination from others. Even though we know the aspect of a Second Life citizen is a mask, it seems to have an impact on the way we relate to him/her.

This, to me, is related in some way to the fact that the learning experiences you make in interactive virtual worlds (think “video games”) affect your “non-game” life as well (think “flight simulators”). Which can bring us to question, for example, what effect it can have on one’s brain to spend a long number of hours “killing virtual people”. But that’s another chapter!

ZoneAlarm with coComment: Here’s the Fix

A bit over a week ago, Lee Hopkins, an early coComment adopter, reported that coComment had stopped tracking his conversations.

The very next day, Christophe was at it to try and find what was going on. He quickly noticed that Lee wasn’t in fact logged into the coComment server (although Lee had been logging in as asked). Finally the problem was narrowed down to a cookie setting in ZoneAlarm, a popular Windows firewall that Lee was using. (The details of the one-on-one troubleshooting that went on behind the scenes have not been disclosed, so that part of the story will be left to your imagination.)

So, if coComment seems to have stopped tracking your comments, and you are using ZoneAlarm, click the Site List tab in ZoneAlarm and check the “3rd party” cookie control for cocomment.com:

ZoneAlarm Cookie Settings

That should do it! Let us know if this was useful for you.

Disclaimer: I don’t have ZoneAlarm, so if you have trouble finding the screen depicted here, ask in the comments and we’ll get more precise explanations for you. Thanks to Lee for the screenshot.

technorati tags:, , , , , ,

Initially posted on the coComment blog.

First Steps in Second Life

[fr]

Mes premiers pas dans l'environnement Second Life. En trois sessions (hier soir, ce matin, et ce soir) j'ai tout de même réussi à changer d'habits et de coupe de cheveux. Je trouve l'apprentissage difficile. Ce n'est pas habituel pour moi de me sentir maladroite et submergée d'informations devant un ordinateur!

[en]

A few months ago, I signed up for Second Life. I spent one evening going through the “training” island, and then didn’t go back until yesterday (Second Life won’t run on my windows box).

Well, people, I’m finding it really hard. I’m not used to finding myself in an environment I have trouble using and which is confusing to me. Here’s the story of what I’ve been through and understood (or not) — with pictures, so that you can get an idea what’s going on in there if you’re not familiar with Second Life. I’m Stephanie Spicoli in Second Life — do get in touch in-world if you have an account.

One thing I’ve pretty much figured out is how to use the arrows to walk around. Sounds silly, heh? At first, I kept running into things. Now I’m getting used to turn left/right, and backwards/forwards.

Yesterday evening, I spent some time in the welcome zone — lots of weirdos there. A kind person helped me out a bit by giving me things and showing me some place I could go to which were nice.

Put this way, it sounds straightforward, doesn’t it? Well, it isn’t. What happened is I started having all sorts of little pop-ups appearing on my screen. I didn’t know for the life of me what to do with them. First I clicked “Discard” on all of them because I didn’t know what they were. Then I had to ask her to give them to me again, and vaguely understood I had to keep them in my Inventory (that’s where you store things in Second Life, kind of like a big handbag). But I couldn’t figure out how to put them in there. Actually, I just had to close the pop-up windows, they were already in my inventory. Gosh. Thank goodness chatting is pretty similar (albeit somewhat laggy when it comes to typing feedback) and I’m at least familiar with that part.

Very confusing I then teleported to New Citizens Incorporated, a place which gives classes and has lots of free stuff for newcomers. You can see the shops on this photograph. I went into one of the shops, and the shelves were absolutely packed with all sorts of stuff which didn’t make much sense to me. Well, one type of item I understood was “clothes”. I wasn’t really interested in clothes at first, until I saw another person wearing exactly the same outfit as I was! I was still wearing the default outfit they give you in the training zone.

That set me off on my first mission: try to get some new clothes. Not as easy as it sounds. I managed to get a box or two of female clothes off a shelf (Cmd-click on the box, and choose buy). Of course, I tried to wear the clothes directly and ended up with a box on my head. Then I understood I had to go in my inventory, drag the box out of it so it was on the floor, Cmd-click on it, choose open, then go back into my inventory, look at what items of clothing were in there, Cmd-click the ones I wanted to wear and choose “wear” from the menu. Sounds like a lot of trouble just to change clothes, doesn’t it? Well, it was. It probably took me an hour. Needless to say that in the process I ended up in my underwear — though hopefully I managed to avoid being stark naked in the middle of NCI Plaza.

Classes you can take at New Citizens

At that point I was ready to try to do something with my hair. Somebody told me there were classes organized for new Second Life citizens, so I went to have a look at the program. Unfortunately there was no class named “dye your hair pink in less than 30 minutes”, so I postponed that piece of fun to the next session.

Instead, I played around a bit with the camera controls (I desperately wanted to see what my face looked like) and tried to take a snapshot or two. Managed to zoom out! Well, I still have a lot of learning to do. Zoom in and out works now that I’ve understood I can use the MacBook trackpad scrolling technique (go up or down the trackpad with two fingers, and it scrolls/zooms). As for detaching the camera from right behind my avatar and moving it around and up and down… well, sometimes I manage, sometimes I don’t. It’s a bit hit-and-miss — again, not something I’m used to on a computer. I’m aware that for many people, normal computer use is just as confusing as Second Life is for me now. It’s an interesting experience for me.

As I’m writing this, I’m trying to remember when I did what. I’ve been on Second Life three times (last night, this morning, tonight). I’m honestly not certain which part of the story I’m telling you was last night, and which part was this morning. My memories are a bit confused and jumbled up.

Right, I went to look at the time I took the various screenshots I have: this morning, I chatted quite a bit with a bunch of people who were trying to build a Griefball.

Meet the Griefball!

A Griefball? Well, as one put it, mainly a statement — but the idea was also that this ball would then be programmed to get rid of griefers. Griefers are the Second Life equivalent to trolls. We had one this morning, by the way: he was dancing all over the place and making noises and stuff. Pretty irritating. I “muted” him (the equivalent of “ignore”) and then I think somebody else filed an abuse report on him. How do you mute somebody? Not too hard: Cmd-click on that person’s avatar, and click “Mute” in the menu that appears.

This morning, I also decided to do something about my hair. After a few random clicks in my inventory (I saw I had different kinds of hair in there) I finally landed in the hair style editing menu. Holy cow! There are tons of settings. You can literally spend hours doing your hair in Second Life.

Spend hours doing your hair

I also managed to make it pink (my initial goal). The magic slider for that is “rainbow colour” (don’t ask).

Tonight, I:

  • grew a pink tiger-tail (not quite true, somebody gave it to me)
  • swapped my red shirt (arghl, not nice with pink hair) for a green one (which I modified myself!)
  • went for a stroll in the park by sunset
  • got stuck in a mountain (no photos of that, I was too busy trying to get out).

Want pictures? Clicky below:

Stephanie Spicoli New green shirt Sunset

Overall, for the moment, I’ve met quite a few nice helpful people. What makes Second Life exciting is also what makes it really difficult to get into: it’s complex. I’m spending a lot of time learning stuff which isn’t really that interesting in itself for me (I have no ambition to become a digital hairstylist) but which is needed for what’s coming next. Feeling comfortable with your inventory, moving the camera about, doing things with objects… there are all basic skills and I’m not comfortable with them yet. But if you want a world where people can be digital artists, build businesses, organise live music performances or conferences, you need that level of complexity to allow users to be creative.

As one of the people who helped me out this morning said: “there’s not a lot of hand-holding”. Inside Second Life, of course, there are classes and coaching, but in my opinion the interface is complicated enough that it’ll get in the way from getting help in-world for many people.

I’m certain there is (will soon be) a market for introduction classes to Second Life… in First Life.

Second Life: c’est quoi?

[en]

A brief explanation of what Second Life is. It's a graphical world you access to by signing up on the website and downloading a programme to your computer. In that world, you are represented by an "avatar" (you can see mine from the back at the bottom of the picture, in the middle).

You can interact with other people there by chatting, and you can also interact with objects in the world, or even create things. Everything you see in the photograph was created by people like me (only they have a bit more experience, obviously!)

There is money in Second Life you can use to buy and sell things. If you make things people want, like clothes, you can actually make money inside Second Life and convert it into real (First Life) currency. Second Life is free to use, though you'll need a paying account if you want to do fancy things like own land.

The difference between Second Life and online multiplayer games is that there is no goal or meaning to it other than what we put into it. You can go into Second Life because you like chatting in a graphical environment, or because you enjoy being a digital hairdresser/stylist/architect/whatever. You can organise conferences or even musical events. Basically, anything is possible.

[fr]

03.12.2006: Lecteurs du Matin Dimanche, par ici!

Second Life est un monde virtuel. On y accède en ouvrant un compte (comme pour la plupart des services en ligne) et en installant un programme sur son ordinateur. Un monde virtuel, ça peut ressembler à ça:

Very confusing

Là, vous me voyez en bas au milieu de l’image, de dos. Il y a deux ou trois autres personnages dans l’image, et au fond, une série de magasins. On est représenté dans le monde virtuel par son avatar — un personnage du monde virtuel que l’on peut contrôler et façonner à sa guise.

A l’intérieur de Second Life, on peut se déplacer, chatter avec les gens que l’on rencontre, agir sur les objets du monde que l’on rencontre, et même fabriquer toutes sortes de choses. Tout ce que vous voyez dans la photo du haut a été construit par les “résidents” de Second Life (des gens comme moi, mais qui maîtrisent un peu mieux). Quand on se déplace, le champ visuel (la “caméra”) se déplace aussi automatiquement.

Si on veut, Second Life est comme un grand chatroom, mais avec un environnement graphique. Du coup, on ne va pas se contenter d’intéragir avec les personnes présentes, mais aussi avec le monde lui-même.

L’interface graphique fait penser aux jeux de rôle en réseau multi-utilisateurs comme World of Warcraft. La grande différence entre un tel jeu et Second Life est que dans Second Life, il n’y a pas de “but du jeu”: comme dans la vie réelle (First Life), c’est nous qui produisons les buts et le sens.

Second Life est gratuit. Si on veut posséder du terrain, par contre, il faut un compte payant. A l’intérieur de Second Life, il y a de l’argent. On en reçoit un peu au départ, et on peut l’utiliser pour acheter des choses. Comme dans Second Life n’importe qui peut créer des objets, on peut aussi s’improviser artisan ou artiste digital et vendre ses productions à d’autres. On peut même y gagner sa vie — en fait, toute une économie parallèle est en marche dans ce monde, et comme il y a un taux de change entre la monnaie “virtuelle” de Second Life et de vrais dollars, elle peut avoir une incidence sur la nôtre.

Incroyable mais vrai!

[en]

It has finally arrived!

[fr]

Il est enfin arrivé!

Finally!