SL land grid circa 2018, photo by Daniel Voyager
There once was a virtual world that kept growing and growing (and often shrinking along the way), with dozens of new islands and continents suddenly emerging, seemingly from the digital ocean, every month. But then in the real world, a global pandemic caused many to seriously reconsider how they spent their leisure time, and return their attention to that aging virtual world. Which in the meantime, was moving away from the old way of existing, on a network of thousands of connected servers, and go instead into the cloud. And then those two factors coming together at once caused a major interruption, and stopped the world from growing. (For now.)
Second Life is in the process of migrating from our existing dedicated servers to a cloud hosting service. That migration has already moved a number of the most important services and databases, but we are not quite ready to host simulators in the cloud. We have a crack team working on that and are making lots of progress, but there are significant changes needed to make sure that we can provide the performance, stability, and security required. When that process is complete we will have a nearly unlimited region capacity, but until then we are constrained by the size of our existing server fleet.
While our migration project has been underway for some time, even our most optimistic business projections did not anticipate a surge of the magnitude we have seen in recent weeks for additional regions. While we planned for growth driven by improvements to Second Life and other factors, we didn't expect demand to be created by a global pandemic.
As a result, we are in the unfortunate position of hitting the maximum capacity of our “old” servers until the “new” cloud servers are fully operational.
And so if you want new land, Linden Lab recommends renting it from an SL land baron -- or renting mainland territory from Linden Lab itself. In any case, it is an unfortunate hiccup for Second Life's prospects, which was starting to see more usage and land ownership in the wake of the pandemic:
As you can see from Tyche Shepherd's grid survey(click above to embiggenate), the global quarantine helped to reverse a slow but steady erosion of Second Life land (mostly private islands people could no longer afford).
While this may seem like bad news for people wanting new territory, it might actually be a good thing for the virtual world as a whole, which currently has a mainland that has vast swathes of unclaimed or abandoned land. It's no fun to be forced to do more with less, but that situation often inspires creativity too.
Are you really sure you want to buy our product? It's just not a good time for us.
No, you definitely can't have premium package. We might be able to throw something together, but you're going to have lower your expectations.
Honestly, it would be best if you just go to one of our brokers. Run along.
Posted by: Sales Be Gone | Tuesday, May 19, 2020 at 09:01 AM
This pandemic has been very miserly in throwing opportunity around. For most people and business, it's required flexibility and sacrifice. If growth is knocking on your door right now, don't you have some bigger obligation to pursue it? It's a gift that's coming from so much devastation around you.
Grocery store workers and health care workers and others are putting their lives on the line to keep this society running. LL has an opportunity to meet demand that isn't going to cost them their lives. Get your head out of your cloud. Try harder. You really owe that to those of us who are swimming in Suckfest 2020.
Posted by: Helen Moore | Tuesday, May 19, 2020 at 09:57 AM
Godspeed to the cloud migration!
Posted by: Susan Wilson | Wednesday, May 20, 2020 at 04:41 AM
I think LL made a mistake in their announcement. It read, "We have a crack team working on that...". That should have read "We have the team on crack...."
Posted by: TD_Gunner | Thursday, May 21, 2020 at 02:57 PM
I just want to know if the Mainland will also move to the cloud, which would eliminate the current LAG is has. Owning a region on the Mainland and paying a monthly fee to SL deserves the same advantages any other land owner may receive.
Posted by: Tsah Resident | Sunday, October 18, 2020 at 09:12 AM