today’s research is a book of collected articles about MOOs. 25 years after the public virtual world boom, it’s refreshing finding that so much good research was done before it all collapsed in the late 2000s

#mud #moo #mush #virtualworld

after a lot of digging, TIL that the original programmer of MOO was Stephen White, a canadian who was a student at the U of Waterloo in ontario at the time. he also wrote TinyMUCK (a descendent of TinyMUD) in the same period, but it’s not clear to me how much overlap there was between those codebases.

edit: in case you’re unfamiliar with MOOs, MUCKs, MUSHes: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MOO

his AlphaMOO was then picked up by Pavel Curtis at Xerox PARC and rewritten into (beta, and then) LambdaMOO. everyone remembers Curtis’s contributions but I never see White mentioned.

what I find fascinating about this is that on the basis of pure code and design, MOOs and MUCKs are generally written with an eye for social interaction, creative expression, society-building and cooperation. compare that with the many descendents of MUDs which prioritize PvP and PvE combat/killing over all else.

the canadian connection is fascinating to me, because i don’t think this is accidental. there’s an implicit value shift in virtual world design at the code level. sure, people *can* build combat modules for MOOs and MUCKs, but they were not part of the base loadout.

when it comes to design, what you leave out is just as loud as what you put in.

#muck #moo #mud #virtualworld #canada

MOO - Wikipedia

@vga256 Oh I need to read this - and thanks for all your MOO-posting of late. I think today's social media/digital communities have a lot to learn from those of the past about what effective and ineffective community-building and moderation look like. Also pedagogy! Which is something I wasn't aware of and is f***ing cool. I'm kind of an amateur student of the history of online communities so this is juicy stuff.
@90sScriptKiddiw i'm pretty surprised at how much certain academic disciplines embraced MUDs/MOOs. but then again, since they all originated from university students, i guess it was a natural thing for their professors to become interested in the topic and develop some theory/practice around them