Posted Jan 01, 2007 at 03:59AM by Ryan A. Listed in: News, Second Life Tags: Linden Lab, Teen Grid
Ó

camp gkIn the virtual world of Second Life, different users are actually divided into grids. Developer Linden Lab was wise enough to do this because it provides protection for the younger users. With all the attacks happening inside the game, we definitely wouldn't want our teens smeared with goo, right?

Anyway, initial reactions to the Teen Grid were somewhat not favorable as cynics argued that attackers can always pose as teenagers themselves. As much as they have a point, it is amazing to know that the Teen Grid has taken a culture of its own, and is alive and vibrant. Just a couple of days ago, the community development team came up with a list of things to expect from the said grid.

Included in that list is the Global Kids island that teaches teen residents regarding world and social issues. True enough, Global Kids just published their first comic book about their first virtual summer camp that happened in the summer of 2006. The actual comics is 12 pages long and was created using photos from the program along with excerpts from the public chat logs.

Click on the Read link below to download or purchase the said comic book.


Read Permalink  |   Email this  |   Linking Blogs   |   Digg It!

Bookmark / Find this article on:


0 Comments


Sort by:


The QJ.net Network RSS Feeds
QJ Forums
PC Gaming
Sony PSP
PlayStation 3
Xbox 360
Nintendo DS
Nintendo Wii
Blog of Blogs Feed / PDA
QJ.NET RSS / PDA
Gaming Consoles Feed / PDA
Nintendo DS RSS / PDA
PlayStation 3 RSS / PDA
PSP Updates RSS / PDA
Wii RSS / PDA
Xbox 360 RSS / PDA
PC Gaming Feed / PDA
MMORPG RSS / PDA
Personal Computer Games RSS / PDA
World of Warcraft RSS / PDA
Technology Feed / PDA
Apple RSS / PDA
iPhone - iPod Touch RSS / PDA
Add QJ.NET
Add to My Yahoo!
Google Reader Subscribe with Bloglines
Add  to your Kinja digest Subscribe in NewsGator Online
Subscribe with Pluck RSS reader Add 'www.qj.net' to Newsburst from CNET News.com
Subscribe with SearchFox RSS del.icio.us www.qj.net
Add to Technorati Favorite! Add to My AOL
furl! it Stumble for Treehugger!