I am writing this to help me put my thoughts in order.
First things first: I am not an expert on virtual reality. I have been in this space when it was 2D, starting in 2006, and when the Head-Mounted Displays came along in 2014. I have tried many virtual worlds, but now seems to be the tipping point for VR as the word metaverse seems to have entered the public lexicon.
So, here we are at the cusp of what, I think, will be a world-changing/perspective-changing time in the world. Those of us who have read Snow Crash and Neuromancer and dream of a giant virtual world may believe that itâs almost here, but I am not so sure. My own personal guess is that the metaverse may belong to several large companies, probably Epic Games (yes, games), Facebook (Horizon), and whatever Apple decides (probably a kit bash of VR and AR).
Why do I want to make a cat for Open Source? I donât trust Facebook. Zuckerberg wants your data, and he already has it, but he wants more. He wants to throw ads at you in the metaverse, and inundate whatever landscapes you build with BUY BUY BUY. (Remember, this is an opinion piece).
Epic? They will have the young people, and thatâs the choice market, no? Many people do not realize that games and gaming are a bigger entertainment market than television and movies. Thus, the logical metaverse morphs out of the young people playing Roblox, Fortnite, and creating games in Core. Everything you want and need is in Epic Games, and their Unreal Engine is gorgeous.
This leads me to the teeny tiny worlds that are being created by avid coders and content creators that are not connected to any big corporation.
History
Once upon a time there was a visionary named Philip Rosedale. I have been told that Second Life, his first âmetaverseâ was built with the inspiration to recreate Burning Man virtually. Once he left Linden Lab as CEO, he began to develop a metaverse for the new virtual reality headsets, named High Fidelity. The beauty of HiFI was that it was Open Source, meaning anyone with the skills could build it and develop it however they wanted. Want to be able to see who is online in the worlds? You can use JavaScript and build an app for that in the world. It was decentralized and different from anything else around. Even the money system was built by High Fidelity on the blockchainâway before cryptocurrency was the craze it is today.
Sadly, the project folded about a year and a half ago I wonât go into why now,) but because the code was open source a few hardy souls created forks and kept it going.
Pros and Cons of Open Source
I spend a lot of time in Sansar, and I love it. Itâs a social virtual world that really looks pretty, and has a solid underpinning. In fact, it was created by the team from Linden Lab who created Second Life. If anything happened to Sansar, I would lose all my worlds along with the ability to log into Sansar.
In an Open World, everything I create is hosted by me (I have an Amazon S3 storage that is pennies a month) and runs on a server that I ârentâ from Digital Ocean for ten dollars a month. That, to me, is quite inexpensive, and if I had the skill I could host a server at home for the cost of electricity.
The point of all this, is that the big companies will run slick and pretty worlds, but Open Source will always remain a viable way to provide the metaverse.
Open Source Open Worlds
For years I have had an idea for a virtual reality intervention (non-profit) for the seriously and persistently mentally ill. I want to collaborate with them on the learning of living skills. I demonstrated my interactive build to my large health care systemâs small psychiatric hospital, and people were perplexed. It was too soon. However, now seems to be the time, so I looked around for a place to rebuild.
I reviewed several worlds, aided by Ryan Schultzâs wonderful compendium of social VR worlds.
I ran through a number of them, started learning Unity and Unreal Engine, and finally ended up back in Vircadiaâopen source VR. There are a number of drawbacks to this. For one, I have to rent a server and cloud storage, which is not expensive, but is an expense.
The biggest drawback is that my plan was to make inexpensive Oculus Quest2 headsets available so that people could join me on the metaverse easily. Vircadia, with a tiny but dedicated development team, is not Quest2 ready. Oh well. At least it works on desktop.
I have learned that persistence is more useful than any other skill or intelligence.
The Case for Open Source VR
Why it doesnât Metta
The incoherent garbled nonsense of Virtual worlds are the key to its abject failure.
They fail because the form preceded the function.
If it looks pretty, they will come.
They looked pretty so why arenât they here?
They fail because they donât have the functionality to give them lasting appeal. The communities are formed only from strangers with contradictory visions of that the Metaverse should be.
VR was wonderful but it doesnât add anything that a phone screen canât do. So why have it? Its like printing books on something other than paper because its better. It might be better, but no one cares.
Can I do my shopping in virtual worlds? Yes, you can buy lots of things. Ok where do I get cat food.
Can I hold my business meeting in a virtual world? Yes, you can. Ok how to I open my PowerPoint. Oh well you canât but look you can wave your arms around a bit.
VR has a real presence. Yes, but I can see everyone in Zoom. Yes but the latency is lower in.. Hello are you still there?
If you canât lure more people into VR during a global pandemic when everyone had to work at home then as an idea your either way off target or totally fucked.
Facebook could piss away all its money and not make it fly.
Because company after company insist on making exactly the same mistakes as their competitors, time after time.
They have all the answers because they are coders
They never bother to ask anyone if itâs needed in the first place or actually doing something better than you could do it without it.
Open or closed isnt the problem. The problem is its functionless garbage .
You're way smarter than I am, so yes, you are right