Second Life has decided to open up its source code to get the open source community to work on it and help rapidly expand and enhance it.
“There are lots of handicapped people using Second Life. It’s one of the really inspiring things about it,” Rosedale said. “There are a lot of ways of connecting people to their computers, not just mice and keyboards but gaze detection and neuromuscular stuff” that Linden Lab doesn’t have the manpower to address, but he hopes outside programmers will.
Someone also could “hook up an exercise bike and fly around Second Life while exercising,” he said, or write a program for accessing the world from a smart phone.
“All that becomes extremely easy to do,” said Rosedale, who will speak tomorrow at the International Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas.
[via MSNBC]