First Look: Sun's Project Wonderland, 3D for Enterprise

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You've probably heard of Sun's Project Darkstar, maybe even Wonderland, the underlying engine, and middleware apps powering the company's internal MPK20 virtual workspace. Did you know that you can now download the client and server, and run them on your own system though? No? Neither did I. After a chat with Klaatu Niu in Second Life yesterday, I spent a good deal of time exploring Project Wonderland, which you can think of as a kind of middleware application with Darkstar beneath it, and MPK20 above. Though i couldn't get it to run on my Mac (they say it can be done, but there are no precompiled binaries as of yet and it would not run for me..) I did get it running on Windows very quickly, and have to tell you, that its pretty impressive, and could well be the major game changer others hinted at earier this year.

project wonderland, mpk20The picture you see here to the left is my blue haired avatar running around an empty local server populated by these bots you see sitting in front of me. Here's the thing -- that clunky looking avatar may not be the most beautiful expression of personal art in the world, but it took me less than 2mins to set it up, at which point, with simple arrow key navigation, I was walking around quite happily, and had these bots been real, could have been communicating just as simply.

The 3D was very smooth, everything you could hope for. The example environment (Sun's MPK20 world) looked professional, as you can see. When you put all of that together with the ease of setup that the limits on avatar customization ensure, the GPL license, emphasis on security, and scalability as well as it's lightweight and cross platform Java based archtecture, AND the fact that you will very shortly be able to network individual servers, I think you'll see why I think Linden Lab, makers of Second Life have cause to be concerned.

Secure, Private or Public 3D Grids Are Coming

wonderland controlsThat's right, in the next version of Wonderland, you'll be able to run your own private, secure grid, or set up public ones. All you need is a bank of fairly regular web servers. It will still take some time before we start seeing any really useful non Sun run grids running Wonderland, as content creation is still firmly out of most peoples reach, needing to be imported from X3D data produced by tools like Maya or Blender, but there are plans for inworld creation tools, though no time frame is given. What really interests me here though is the question of security. Wonderland has been put together for use by Sun, and thus security has been a concern from the outset. Second Life has a woeful record on Security, and though many large tech companies operate in Second Life, none of them are confident of the systems security or stability -- If Wonderland can provide 3D working environments with secure voice chat, it could well be the kind of secure, enterprise level 3D application that eats Linden's lunch.

Did you check out Croquet too?

Not yet Vint, but it's on the list!

It'll be interesting to see whether they'll be a number of niche virtual worlds a bit like how digg, netscape, reddit etc all have different audiences whilst working on a very similar principles

I've been keeping my eye on this one for a while, being an old java monkey from way back.
Has some way to go, but has some interesting potential.
I especially like the features of the voice bridge - very nice!
http://research.sun.com/projects/mc/voice-bridge.html
Would be nice if they release that soon as well, to start testing some concepts.

SL is overkill for a number of application scenarios [not to mention the woeful QOS and security issues] so there is definately a market for a more lightweight, secure, collaborative 3D platform.
I wonder if NGI (http://www.virtualworldsnews.com/2007/07/new-japanese-co.html) is looking to leverage this given their consultant is heavily involved with Darkstar.

I've tried Croquet/Qwaq forums demo. Has some nice features too, but had a few issues as well imo.

Certainly going to be an interesting time from here on in;-)

How do you get to try a Qwaq demo?

I inquired via email and received no response.

Was the Qwak demo a single or multi-user demo?

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http://suezannecbaskerville.wordpress.com

Try Hipihi: company site: www.hipihi.com user site: www.ideashape.cn

I emailed them with my evaluation needs and their sales guy got back to me and we did a multi-user demo.
I found them quite responsive - what did you say in your email? I'm not sure they are interested in people doing general reviews, they are more business focused - read the about us on their website and you can see who is involved.

It's targeted at the same space as Wonderland, secure 3D collab for Enterprise/b2b. This is an early stage market and I think the tech [qwaq, sun et al] still has a little ways to go before deployment into the wild, apart from smaller proof-of concept/pilot projects - though I understand there are some larger projects in the works.

I enjoy your Hipihi articles, I am about to start testing that soon. Kaneva and vLES have their own strengths and weaknesses as well.