- Joined
- Sep 26, 2018
- Messages
- 159
- Location
- Second Life
- SL Rez
- 2006
- Joined SLU
- 07-16-2008
- SLU Posts
- 5036
I did some digging and it's quite interesting in it's own way. I've worked out what she did and why it looks so shit (apart from the fact she's he's crap at 3d modelling and I suspect those objects came from some stock seller).
I actually got quite excited at the thought of it but the technical capabilities (read coding) required to pull off what I wanted to do defeated me...(although I may just grovel at a few people to see if they want to go into a partnership...)
Essentially there's an online platform where you buy the land straight up - it's around $5000/16m2 irrc and then you stick the objects on it, extract and wrapper it and sell it on. Whoever bought that piece has ownership of the land in this world (can't remember the name of it right now)
However! there's much more interesting things that can be done with it by people like us - most people are just taking images and wrappering them and trying to flog them as all the nft does is provide the equivalent of a bill of sale.
All of us could do much, much better... for the kind of pieces like hers though it requires that staggering amount of upfront cost for the land.
edited after reading Innula's link as it seems she outsourced it to someone who is pretty woeful at this 3D stuff (and she doesn't seem to understand about intellectual property rights)
I actually got quite excited at the thought of it but the technical capabilities (read coding) required to pull off what I wanted to do defeated me...(although I may just grovel at a few people to see if they want to go into a partnership...)
Essentially there's an online platform where you buy the land straight up - it's around $5000/16m2 irrc and then you stick the objects on it, extract and wrapper it and sell it on. Whoever bought that piece has ownership of the land in this world (can't remember the name of it right now)
However! there's much more interesting things that can be done with it by people like us - most people are just taking images and wrappering them and trying to flog them as all the nft does is provide the equivalent of a bill of sale.
All of us could do much, much better... for the kind of pieces like hers though it requires that staggering amount of upfront cost for the land.
edited after reading Innula's link as it seems she outsourced it to someone who is pretty woeful at this 3D stuff (and she doesn't seem to understand about intellectual property rights)
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