Technology Review - Published By MIT
Advertisement

A Second Dorm Life

Design competition for virtual MIT dorms.

By Erica Naone, SM '07

January/February 2008

smaller text tool iconmedium text tool iconlarger text tool icon

For incoming freshmen, choosing which dorm to request can be daunting, given the idiosyncrasies of MIT's residential communities. Phillip Long, associate director of MIT's Office of Educational Innovation and Technology, thought it might help if prospective students could experience those cultural differences in an online environment like Second Life, Linden Lab's popular virtual world, where in a typical month nearly a million "residents" use avatars--3‑D representations of themselves--to explore simulated landscapes, conduct business, and socialize. So last spring, Long launched the Second Life Student Design Competition, inviting contestants to represent MIT's living spaces as customizable modular "pods," grouped into "clusters" that reflect something of the dorms' spirit and culture.

The elevator in Team Sociable’s virtual dorm can display where people are and where they’ve been.
Credit: Drew Harry and Dietmar Offenhuber

One of the two winning designs is a vertical structure by Team Sociable (a.k.a. Drew Harry and Dietmar Offenhuber, both grad students in the Sociable Media Group at the Media Lab). It lets users select their pods' color, decorate the insides with favorite images, and connect their pods to those of up to four close friends, creating a visual representation of a friend list. "We wanted to make a space where you could express your taste but also show how you're connected to other people," Harry says.

Story continues below

The other winning project, by the undergraduate Team Furrichzeit, features a hexagonal spiral of triangular rooms.

The teams split a $500 prize from the MIT $100K Entrepreneurship Competition. Long hopes to have students in two dorms test the teams' projects in Second Life so that one day, the ability to "live" in virtual dorms will help new students choose their real homes on campus.

Comments

MIT News

Wheel of Global Fortune
A leader in documenting man-made climate change, MIT's Ronald Prinn has also made it his business to inform world leaders--and the public--about the risks of ignoring it.

FEATURES

Perfecting Pitch
Dennis Freeman, SM '76, PhD '86, explores the workings of the inner ear.
Untethered in the Deep
Autonomous underwater vehicles advance--and stop, turn, and hover.

Read more articles from this Issue

77 MASS AVE. MEET THE AUTHOR 1865 MY VIEW SEEN ON CAMPUS
Archives MIT News Subscribe Contact

Log In

Forgot your password?     Register »
Advertisement

Videos

Laser-Triggered Chemical Reactions
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Subscribe to Technology Review's daily e-mail update. Enter your e-mail address

TECHNOLOGY RESOURCES

More Technology News from Forbes

Advertisement
MIT Massachusetts Institute of Technology © 2009 Technology Review. All Rights Reserved.