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September 14, 2008
Creators of the online virtual space, Linden Lab, under its Second Life initiative, recognized the
accomplishments of outstanding individuals in the open source community on Sep. 12 at its Linden Lab
Innovation Awards.
Overall, 7 winners were announced at a mixed reality ceremony held both at a convention center in
Florida and simultaneously within the Second Life system.
Linden's head of open source development Rob Lanphier conducted the awards ceremony at the Second
Life Community Convention. A panel of six judges selected winners in five categories, with each winner
receiving a "Hippo Award" prize package.
Judges selected two winners in the first category, for Best Documentation.
Asuka Neely and Gally Young were recognized for their contributions translating volumes of Second Life wiki documentation into Japanese
and French, respectively.
In the Best Community Organizer category, the judges again decided to award two prizes, but in different
areas.
Tao Takashi was named Best Working Group Organizer for his contributions to the Second Life Architecture
Working Group, the group that heads up efforts to standardize the protocols and data formats used in the
system to make them interoperable with other virtual worlds.
Noting that the subject deserved recognition as an award category of its own, Harleen Gretzky was
recognized as Best Issue Tracker Organizer for her work on the project's issue tracker PJIRA.
Mm Adler was recognized for Best Code Contribution. Adler's contribution added voice-to-model lip-synching
to the Second Life viewer, and was described by Lanphier as both tidy and thoughtful in its execution.
The Jesse Malthus Award for Best Community Influence is named in memory of a significant and well-respected
Second Life developer and community member who died last year.
The winner of the award was Lex Neva, who was singled out not only for making significant contributions to issue tracking on PJIRA, but also for maintaining
"constructive and thoughful" commentary and dialog within the Second Life community.
Nominations for the Linden Lab Innovation Awards are open to the Linux and open source community.
The specific awards given each year vary depending on the decisions of the judges.
The Second Life wiki contains the full text of the awards presentation ceremony, including more details on the winners and the
names and highlights of the runners-up in each category.
Lastly, the award for Contributor of the Year was given to Michelle Zenovka. Lanphier called attention to
Zenovka's code contributions in transitioning the Second Life viewer to CMake, and in bringing the Linux viewer
client up to par with the Windows and Mac OS X builds.
Source: Linden Labs.
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