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September 24, 2007 1:07 PM PDT

Google eyeing its own 'Second Life?'

by Daniel Terdiman

For some time now, we here at CNET News.com have been hearing whispers that Google might be looking to get into the virtual world space, particularly in light of the increasing interest of existing environments like Second Life, and the success of Google Earth and the search giant's purchase of the Sketchup technology.

Well, now we might finally be on to something. According to TechCrunch, Google may already be testing its own 3D virtual world technology, in a secret experiment at Arizona State University.

And according to a report published Monday from eMarketer, Google is "planning enhancements to Google Earth to let users connect virtually with one another."

To be sure, there's no doubt that Google has the resources, especially with Sketchup and Google Earth, to build a vast and powerful 3D virtual world. To many, they're very likely the only ones who could ramp up such an operation and quickly make it successful.

But the key to a really vital virtual world is user-created content. And while users of services like Sketchup could easily import huge amounts of precreated 3D content into a Google-run virtual world, it wouldn't be the kind of new, emergent content that populates Second Life and, to a lesser extent, There.

What that means is that a Google virtual world would still take a long time to have the wide variety and total diversity that it would need to catch the popular imagination. Of course, it would almost certainly have a technological superiority to the shaky Second Life platform, and that could go a long way to bringing in mass numbers of users. But, it would not be an overnight thing.

If it's even happening. And with rumors being what they are, you never know.

A Google spokesman offered this comment: "We're always looking for new ways to help our users connect with each other, share information, and express themselves, but we don't have any new details to share at this time."

The report follows on the heels late last week of a TechCrunch blog item saying that Google will announce a set of APIs on November 5 that will allow developers to "leverage Google's social graph data. They'll start with Orkut and iGoogle (Google's personalized home page), and expand from there to include Gmail, Google Talk and other Google services over time."

The move is designed, according to TechCrunch's anonymous sources, to address the "Facebook issue."

Daniel Terdiman is a staff writer at CNET News covering games, Net culture, and everything in between. E-mail Daniel.
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connnect?
by t8 September 24, 2007 2:20 PM PDT
Is connnect the same as connect?
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Google Earth...
by Mapper99 September 24, 2007 3:04 PM PDT
I think that Google has positioned themselves nicely with Google Sketchup, Google Street View and Google Earth. I think Google Earth will become the client for Google Virtual World with the Street View Imagery superimposed on the Google Sketchup data. Can't wait to see! In the meantime, I'll enjoy the fun found using Google Street View:

http://www.laudontech.com/google-street-view/google-street-view.html
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using the open source Croquet?
by GreenbushLabs September 24, 2007 3:35 PM PDT
Im holding out a sliver of hope this involves Croquet?

Rich
@ http://rich.greenbush.us
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Interesting if true.
by NWLB September 24, 2007 3:56 PM PDT
This is an interesting rumor. Though I'm curious how exactly they'd imcorperate Google Earth.

Its tempting to think you could going and find your home on a virtual map of the city you live in. But will companies sue for planting, say for example, a travel agency location on the virtual map of Dodge Island in Miami? Would planting a virtual business next door to a cruise line's headquarters be treated as an implied copyright infringement? Could I fight somebody putting an virtual adult bookstore on the Google Earth location of my home, church, etc?

Odds are Google would dodge that issue. One way might be with instanced housing and territory, like you see with MMORPG games. I'm tracking the Lord of the Rings Online, which will overlap instances of streets and homes in groups. Sort of the Diagon Alley of the internet....there's a thought.

And surly Google sees a method to tap this pursuit for profit. I can see AdSense plugging into a virtual bar on virtual South Beach and getting money when people enter said venues-view ads as they go. Anchoring websites, or running a Google powered virtual section of a blog or website, that appeals to me directly.

I think Google would utterly crush Second Life, even if that game isn't the prime target for their efforts. Vastly more people willing to translate real money into virtual things through Google I suspect.
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Can Google solve the Intel problem?
by mpflinn September 26, 2007 4:10 PM PDT
A word to Google: INTEL graphics chipsets are not supported by Second Life (you can?t use the site). And SL does not yet support Windows Vista.

I am not alone in finding an irony in the growing presence of Intel in SL; they recently opened a site with a conference center there. No help or hope for this problem from INTEL (a few of us have been on their blog). I guess they don?t use their own chips.
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My Intel Machine connects just fine to Second Life
by slamb43 October 2, 2007 9:28 AM PDT
I have been able to use the site via an Intel based Mac since November 2006, and the mac download specifically states that it's Universal. So the statement that Second Life and Linden Labs don't support Intel processors is not true.
Yahoo virtual world not Google
by chieng333 October 7, 2007 5:02 PM PDT
I read some comments on techcrunch that show a video, it is not google, but yahoo beta testing their virtual world.
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