"...
If Project Wonderland fades away, the likely beneficiary is OpenSim,
which is already seeing significant traction with the education
community. But OpenSim developers say that they�re sad to see Wonderland
lose support.
�I believe that there needs to be a healthy number of projects in the
virtual worlds market,� said Melanie Thielker, an OpenSim core developer
and CEO of OpenSim hosting company 3D Hosting. �In that sense, it is sad
to see that one of them has lost it�s support.�
All the virtual world platforms will suffer as a result of the loss of
Project Wonderland, said Justin Clark-Casey, a core developer with the
open source OpenSim platform, a competing platform to Wonderland.
�In the long term, competition is one force that encourages people to
improve OpenSim,� he said. �A less well-funded Wonderland may well
reduce this effect.�
Clark-Casey said he doubted that many Wonderland developers would switch
to OpenSim.
�You get very attached to a project once you�ve lavished so much work
upon it,� he said. �I think that the same is true for users who have
invested their time in the platform, except maybe for those who were
only just getting familiar with it.�
Project Wonderland offered some improvements over OpenSim, including
full support of mesh objects, PDF files, and shared applications. In
addition, Project Wonderland came with a Web-based client that could run
on any computer with Java installed � no separate download required.
Although these features would be useful for enterprise users, the
technology has not seen much traction in the enterprise space, beyond a
couple of pilot projects.
In addition, Wonderland hasn�t been seen as a popular platform for
public grids. By comparison, OpenSim is currently used as a platform for
about three dozen public grids � including OSGrid, ReactionGrid,
ScienceSim and many others � and hundreds of smaller private grids.
Part of the reason could have been licensing restrictions.
�Wonderland was under the fairly restrictive GPL license, which is
fairly anti-commercial,� said Adam Frisby, an OpenSim core developer and
a founder of OpenSim development firm DeepThink Pty Ltd. �Had Wonderland
has a more �consumer� focus for entertainment value, then that might not
have mattered so much.�
The license makes it difficult to corporate users to customize the
platform or integrate it with proprietary components, he said.
�This was one of the reasons OpenSim was unable to consider using the
Wonderland client,� he added.
Wonderland does have a �great deal of traction� within its community, he
said. �But having no paid developers does tend to put a cramp on a
project. Even OpenSim has several core developers who are paid to work
on OpenSim either full or part time.�
These include teams from IBM and Intel, he said.
In fact, IBM originally short-listed Project Wonderland when it was
considering its virtual world platform, said Peter Finn, IBM senior
architect, in a blog post today.
IBM has long been a supporter of the Java programming language, which
Wonderland is based on, Finn said. In addition, the platform was very
developed technologically.
�I was very impressed by the progress the Wonderland team was making,�
he said. �They had developed avatars, spatial voice, basic physics,
application sharing and collaboration tools.�
IBM decided to back the OpenSim platform � despite its use of
Microsoft�s C# programming language � because of its community of
developers, Finn said.
�I look forward to seeing the Wonderland community joining the
OpenSimulator project,� he said. �If IBMers can learn C# so can the team
from Wonderland.�
�The community of people working in open source virtual worlds is too
small to be scattered,� said Crista Lopes, OpenSim core developer and a
professor of informatics at the University of California, Irvine, in a
comment on the Project Wonderland annoncement. �Consider joining forces,
somehow.�"
regards,
alexander.
--
http://gng.z505.com/index.htm
(GNG is a derecursive recursive derecursion which pwns GNU since it can
be infinitely looped as GNGNGNGNG...NGNGNG... and can be said backwards
too, whereas GNU cannot.)