Archive for November, 2008

La subida de los precios y Wonderland

El 27 de Octubre, los Linden Labs anunciaron que a partir de 1 Enero el tier de Openspace subira por 67%. El anuncio está teniendo una repercusión masiva en todo SL. No sabemos todavía cuál será el resultado de todo esto. Pero en caso de que se realiza esta subida, nos va afectar a todos los que viven en Openspace. Todos nuestros sims son Openspace salvo Caribbean Breeze, Costa del Mar y Porto Negro.

Wonderland lleva ya 20 meses en SL y todo este tiempo hemos mantenido percios estables y nisiquiera los subimos cuándo Linden Labs comencaron a cobrarnos la IVA. Ésta vez también trataremos de absorbir parte de la subida, aunque no podemos hacer mucho porque la subida es excesiva. Todavía nada es cierto pero apenas sabemos algo más, os lo comunicaremos.

Está muy claro que los nuevos tiers talvez sean muchos para algunos. En este caso trataremos de ofrecer a los residents una isla del mismo tamaño en un sim normal (no Openspace) con el tier de antes. Podemos también convertir otra vez los Openspace en sim normales (full sims). En cualquier caso haremos todo para que no perdais vuestras tierras.

Nos gustaría saber lo que pensais. Os interesa ir a vivir en un sim normal? Dejad tus comentarios usando su nombre de SL, por favor.

 

How raised tiers affect Wonderland

After the great uproar tier raises caused, a dialog opened between Estate owners and Linden Labs. The outcome is still unpredictable but, still hoping for the best, we have to prepare for the worst case scenario. In Wonderland all sims are Openspace, except Caribbean Breeze, Costa del Mar and Porto Negro, so they are affected.

So how will Wonderland Openspace residents be affected?

Wonderland has been around for 20 months maintaining practically the same tiers, even after Linden Labs started charging us VAT. We absorbed the cost then and we will try to absorb part of the cost now, although we can’t do much as the raise is exorbitant. When tier raises are final, we will publish the new tiers for Openspaces.

We understand that the new tiers may be out of some’s budget. In that case we will try to provide you with a same size island on a normal prim sim with the same tier as before. We may even convert Openspaces back to normal prim sims. In any case we’ll do our best to protect your investment so that you continue to have a place to call home in SL.

Feel free to leave your thoughts but, please, use your SL name.

 

Linden Labs raise Openspace tiers

On October 27th, Jack Linden announced Openspace Pricing and Policy Changes on the official blog of Second Life, saying:

We will increase the monthly maintenance fee from USD$75 to USD$125 per month. This price increase will apply to all owners of Openspaces on January 1st as well as new purchases after that date. There will be no grandfathering of Openspace maintenance pricing. [...] At the same time, we will be increasing the upfront fee for brand new Openspaces from USD$250 to USD$375.

This consistutes an increase of 67% and 150% in tiers, which is quite unreasonable, particularly at a time of a global financial crisis.

They claim that they raise tiers because Openspace sims have been abused and the extra work the support team has to put into them is not reflected in the price. They claim that:

Openspaces are offered to allow Estate owners to create open ocean or land in and around their Regions in the same way that the Linden mainland does.

“In and around”? Perhaps this was true before March 2009, when Openspaces were bought in packs of 4, had to be pegged to a full sim and they carried 1875 prims only. After March 2009, Linden Labs not only doubled the prims to 3750 per Openspace, but they started selling them one at a time and the Openspaces could be placed anywhere on the grid as stand-alone regions. Who in their right mind would create an “open ocean” in the middle of nowhere and for what purpose? What would be the use of 3750 prims in the open ocean?

There is no doubt that some of the Openspace sims have been abused, resulting in heavy overload. There is also no doubt that these sims are very few. Do you know how many sims there are currently in Second Life? 32000 sims! Have you noticed the average number of users online? It varies from 35000 to 75000. That’s an average of 55000 users online. And that is less than 2 users per sim!

Indeed Second Life is for the most part an inhabited place, yet Linden Labs want us to believe that Openspaces attract all the traffic overloading the servers. How else could they justify the unbelievable raise of 67-150%? Who are they trying to fool?

And how will the raised tiers solve the problem of overloaded Openspaces? If you have read already their blog post, they do not offer any improvements at all; they will start charging significantly more for the same features.

Since nothing is final yet, let them hear your voice. File tickets and post on the forums, stating your objection. On our part, we attend every meeting with Linden Labs suggesting solutions and protecting the rights of our residents and Wonderland’s.