Clear Night Sky explores themes of digital communications and culture from a variety of sources and points of view and is brought to you by Clear Ink.
Clear Night Sky |
|
Clear Night Sky explores themes of digital communications and culture from a variety of sources and points of view and is brought to you by Clear Ink. NavigationUser login |
Mac OS XPrint to Second LifeSubmitted by Steve Nelson on Wed, 2007-08-22 11:06. automator | Kiwini Oe | Mac OS X | printing | Second Life My ongoing experiments in Second Life collaborative tools and real-life integration led me to devise a "Print to Second Life" function for Mac OS X. As shown in the pictures, you just select "Second Life" from the PDF pulldown button on the standard print dialog box from any application, and voila, the paged printout shows up on your printer in Second Life. How it's done. I'm not ready to provide a ready-to-run kit of parts for this, but here's a more detailed version of the recipe for the inspired and/or able. Complicated to make, easy to use. # Warning Will Robinson: this is where we remove all the contents of the dropbox and its folder! (As the note indicates, this action will first remove the directory named in the action, without warning, so don’t accidentally doom your favorite directory of recipes!) To change the name, you’ll also have to poke around various files in the action source. The new action, “Delete Dropbox then FTP” is then placed in either the Library/Automator or ~/Library/Automator folder. 2. I created a workflow called “Second Life” using Automator.
3. I created a printer in Second Life The basic printer loads up a media parcel URL from a known location, and pages through the printer output. I have buttons to load and play the first page, load and play next and previous pages, and a button to set up the base URL of the printout directory on your server. The buttons talk to each other to sync up what page is currently being displayed (kept in memory) and what the base URL is (kept in the button’s description field). The real action is done by the llParcelMediaCommandList command. You have to either be the owner of the printer and the land under it, or the land belongs to a group you belong to, and you deed the printer to the group. [Update: I added portrait/landscape mode buttons to flip the printout page to a vertical or horizontal orientation.] 30 years ago, I would take a stack of cards up to a counter, where there was a sign that said “Turnaround Time”, usually something like 45 minutes. 45 minutes later, I’d pick up my printout, find the syntax error, repunch a card and put it in again. Little did I know that all I had to do was wait 30 years and I could sit in my easy chair, push the print button, and have it show up in my own little world of make believe. |