![]() (And all the technical and community prerequisites needed to make that possible). I'll be impressed with Meta's Horizon Worlds when it has a Creepy Mark bot of its own. "I have been known to complain about Facebook censorship and such, so am guessing that had a hand in inspiring it!" "My business partner created him," Moon explains. The smartass brainchild of Moon Bunny Inc & Subculture X, Creepy Mark was the brand's #1 top seller in animated objects in the first days it went on sale, and became a mini-viral hit, ironically enough, on Facebook. He does seem to get confused with climbing hills!) I just got my own personal Creepy Mark, and now he won't leave my side, following my every move while promising not to abuse my personal data and so on. Wainwright explains, by SL's recent avatar skeleton upgrade:Ĭontinue reading "Watch the Latest Feature for SL Roleplay: Dueling Pistols That Can Spin!" »Īfter so many stories about Meta in the Metaverse, the inevitable finally occurred: Meet " Creepy Mark", a chatty bot with a suspiciously familiar appearance which you can buy to silently stalk you in the OG metaverse of Second Life. Watch the trailer above for the supremely cool effect. If you're wearing the gun as an accessory, we've included multiple gun spinning options, a stylish toss, occasional reloads and other idles that play randomly, which can also be toggled off in our menu if you're looking to not twirl your gun or reload all the time. Just in time for the Fantasy Faire and the steampunk-themed SL19B anniversary, Walton Wainwright's dueling pistols come with a seriously cool feature I haven't seen in Second Life up until now: Revolvers that can spin in-game: Now available in BASSETT TOWN - /g2fPN圜YzL Lads and ladies, we're here with our first roleplay revolvers: The Duelist's Pride! Designed to be used idly, in roleplay, and wearing for fashion. You should definitely share it with the LSL scripter in your life, but if you're not a scripter, the short version is: It'll make interactive experiences in Second Life much more powerful and persistent.įor instance, consider the Really Needy HUD (a former NWN partner), which turns Second Life into a first-person Sims-type roleplay game:Ĭontinue reading "Powerful Scripting Update Coming Soon to Second Life - Here's How It'll Improve Interactive Experiences" » Longtime Second Life community scripter NeoBokrug (who keeps the legendary roleplay Wasteland regions running), has a meaty and important tweet storm (above) and blog post here highlighting LinksetData, a much-needed update to Linden Script Language. Before I go on forever about why this is great and will fundamentally change #SL please consider a retweet and maybe a like - to help spread the word. (1/24) There's a super great upgrade coming to scripting, that I don't think is getting great attention it should. It Even Makes Up Code That Doesn't Exist." » Otherwise, you'll only get an answer that's most probabilistically coded to appear like a useful response - in other words, the AI version of Making Shit Up.Īnyway, more fun from Ravelli with ChatGPT, with a plot twist:Ĭontinue reading "No, ChatGPT Can't "Write" Code. ![]() So if you ask ChatGPT to write a working script that happens to already exist in its massive database, you may sometimes get lucky with an actual useful response. Very roughly analogized, ChatGPT is like a natural language version of Google search. This is an important point, because I've seen some people claim that ChatGPT can write Second Life apps in Linden Script Language (or for that matter, any coding language). The AI kept apologizing for making mistakes until I asked it never to apologize again. The script was usable and in the style we usually write them, with a 300 second timer. This went on until I specifically asked for a script that only used existing functions. The AI apologized and fixed the script by using another non-existent function. It wrote a nice script, but it didn't work because the AI was using an LSL function that didn't exist. Fun comment from reader Ravelli Ormstein, spinning off from my post about how full of fail ChatGPT is when you ask it a question you're an expert on:įirst, I asked ChatGPT to write a LSL script that would turn on a light when the sun went down.
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