City In Georgia Planning Virtual World For Civic Interaction 39
GamePolitics reports that Decatur, Georgia is looking into the development of a virtual environment to "encourage community networking, improve civic engagement, and promote economic development in the city." They've put out a request for ideas (PDF) on how to adapt a blending of MMOs and social networking to suit a city's civic needs. "The virtual environment should mimic, though not necessarily mirror, the layout and visual aspects of the City within the defined geographic area." They also want it to be avatar-based, friendly to businesses, and have a "fun and intuitive interface."
I'm feeling this one! (Score:2, Interesting)
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I was thinking that to keep with the virtual words thing, you'd want a type of game that'd be good to interact with other people online at the time.
So, maybe something along the line of Dead Rising -- you and the other players attempt to defend the town from the zombie uprising. Or, possibly allow you to play one of the psychos just to keep some balance, but it might be better from a community building aspect if all of the humans were working together. Which would work right up 'til the first griefer came
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And the theme music would be "Re: Your brains".
Virtual Mayor. (Score:3, Funny)
"GamePolitics reports that Decatur, Georgia is looking into the development of a virtual environment to "encourage community networking, improve civic engagement, and promote economic development in the city."
The Sims meets Sim City.
Meanwhile, the entire neighbourhood is whimpering (Score:2)
Well, there will be someone to try something like this [bradleysalmanac.com].
*quote from above link:*
"Meanwhile, the entire neighbourhood is whimpering and standing in puddles of their own urine.
BWAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA! I don't really have to say anything else here, do I?"
And it has clowns!
Good luck with that. (Score:5, Interesting)
This all assumes that the citizens in the community are anxiously and zealously awaiting the chance to partake in this experiment. From my perspective, most of the people who actually concern themselves with community matters are the ones who will view this project as a mere gimmick to be avoided. I understand the idea is to encourage more community involvement by appealing to the more tech-savvy generation, but I truly do not believe this will be the stunning success that the article seems to imply they want it to be.
Coupons can be obtained from a plethora of other sources (newspaper anyone?). Visitor's information would be best served on a standard web page. And streaming video? Nobody watches C-SPAN, and that's nation-wide. How many viewers are they expecting from a town of 20,000?
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'Nobody' watches C-SPAN? Hyperbole at best. I know for a fact that people watch our city council on the public access channel. (Town of 40k or so.)
I love how Slashdot, supposedly the home of those eager to explore the 'new frontier' of the digital world - spends so much time scorning pretty much every attempt to use the internet to create a virtual world. Unless that virtual world is dedicated to file sharing.
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Though you're right in that my "nobody" comment was pure hyperbole. It was supposed to be a subtle reference to the SNL skit in which the big 3 automaker CEOs claimed that "nobody watches C-SPAN" but I ki
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How is making the government accessible to the people overkill? How is it the wrong solution to your (undefined) problem? How is adding additional channels for people to get involved in their community not going to help?
The world is going is going digital and online - and the supposedly technically savvy and net literate Slashdot community does nothing but sit and make snarky and unsupported comments.
Ew.. (Score:2)
Second Georgia?
Ew.
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Nah, you misunderstand Decatur, which is actually part of Atlanta. Decatur disagrees with this notion despite being inside the perimeter, and therefore this is merely one of a number of attempts to be "different" and to distinguish itself as the odd child out-- which it's been trying to do pretty much since being the only town in Georgia to vote against secession during the civil war.
There are even more technological oddities in Decatur that make people want to become Amish, for instance pay parking that r
"encourage community networking" (Score:2, Insightful)
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Actually the whole thing is pretty silly. As a virtual environment only develops an IP address and a bank of servers at a hosting service. To develop a town, now is the time to focus on life style, a well behaved responsive police force, easy access to public services and, a clean healthy environment.
Distance working is all about providing an hospitable socially interactive environment where remote workers can log out and tune into a comfortable easygoinglifestyle. People need to develop the idea of sepa
Already going on in the UK (Score:2)
Dan Lockton's fantastic Architectures of Control [danlockton.co.uk] blog pointed out this week that the city of Sutton is already engaged in a similar, and yet more tangible project [sutton.gov.uk]
This seems like a horrible idea. (Score:3, Insightful)
Now, in the future, I can imagine certain uses of a non-sucky virtual city, see "plot" section here [wikipedia.org].
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Waste of Money (Score:1)
There have got to be some roads that need to be paved, or the library could always use more books.
At most, a small town needs a well organized and moderated forum. maybe throw in some social networking juju, but avatars?
There are some successful virtual worlds out there, which, despite their success, I have no interest in visiting. Their effort will be crappy, buggy, pointless, and empty.
The only use I could imagine using this for would be to walk down, virtually, to the mayors house and scream obscenities
I cannot believe no one has said this.... (Score:1)
russia (Score:1)
I hope Russia doesn't take them over in VR too! :P
Project Wonderland - FOSS from Sun (Score:1)
Project Wonderland is a 100% Java and open source toolkit for creating collaborative 3D virtual worlds. Within those worlds, users can communicate with high-fidelity, immersive audio, share live desktop applications and documents and conduct real business. Wonderland is completely extensible; developers and graphic artists can extend its functionality to create entire new worlds and new features in existing worlds.
Please be more specific (Score:1)
To me and most people around me, the title "City In Georgia Planning Virtual World For Civic Interaction" suggests that the article is about an impoverished city in the Caucasus trying to use technology to better preserve its ancient heritage during new architectural developments.
Oh great, just what we need. (Score:2)
Watered down Second Life. Without the 'fun'.
An interesting use for Photosynth (Score:2)
Search for local pictures, and, from those, you'd have a nice build of the local scene pretty quickly. You might end up with something like the virtual city in "The City and the Stars" by Arthur C. Clarke. That had the ability for the user to move back and forth in time; that feature could be implemented here too.