Land
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This article is supposed to give an overview about land in Second Life, going from the smallest to the largest scale.
Parcel
An area of land owned by a single user or group, which is at least 16m² and at maximum 65,536m², all within one region. Parcels are composed of square blocks measuring 4×4 meters, but the blocks do not have to be contiguous. Parcels have both an integer local id and a global UUID. Parcel settings are modifiable in the About Land options.
Region
A named 256m x 256m (65,536 m²) area hosted by a single simulator process (sim). In common usage, the term "simulator" or "sim" may also refer to a region, but in fact a single server process can host mulitple regions. They can be flagged as General, Moderate, or Adult.
There are currently three types of regions: Full, Homestead and Openspace (also known as Void). All have the same size, but differ in their avatar-, and primitive limits, as well as in their price. See Private Region Types for official info and Private Region for general FAQ.
Full Region
There is one full region per server host CPU core. A region can hold up to 100 avatars and 15,000 prims.
Homestead
Homestead regions were introduced in January 2009 and are only available for Residents who own at least one full region. It can hold 20 avatars, 3750 prims and the amount of running scripts might be restricted in the future.
Openspace
Openspaces are, like Homesteads, only available for Residents who own at least one full Region. They support a maximum of 10 avatars and 750 prims.
Estate
A collection of regions with a particular shared set of rules, such as banned users, sun position, etc. Estates have integer identifiers. Read also Estate FAQ.
Mainland
The Linden-designed continents (known as "mainland") are the largest connected land-masses in Second Life, consisting of hundreds of regions connected to one another with roads, railroads and open oceans. The “mainland” is estate ID 1 and owned by Governor Linden. Residents with a premium account can buy mainland parcels and need to pay a monthly tier when their land exceeds 512m². See landpricing info. A mainland region supports a maximum of 40 avatars.
Private Estate
Private estates are collections of Resident owned Regions. Some of these Residents rent out the land inside their regions, and Basic Account holders can rent land from these residents without maintaining a Premium membership. See Estate Management and Private Estate Management Companies to learn more.
Grid
In Second Life, a grid refers to an integrated system that provides a networked collection of servers, some of which are simulators that implement the presentation of land. Those are arranged in the form of a rectangular mesh. In addition, the SL grid provides a set of other services, including presence, inventory management, and asset store, that integrate with but are independent of the simulators.[1]
Linden Lab runs several grids for internal and external testing. Asset transfer and teleporting from the main grid (Agni) to another are currently not possible, but might become a feature in the future, when the Open Grid Protocol evolves. Contrary to common belief (and what the wording implies), the Teen Grid and Main Grid differ only via their estates IDs and are on the same Grid (Agni), rather than different Grids. Linden Lab's Grids are named after Hindu gods. Many of the Grids supported by the client are either inaccessible to the public or no longer active. To change the Grid you'd like to connect to, press Ctrl-⇧ Shift-G on the login screen of your viewer and choose the grid from the drop-down menu. Linden Lab obtaines a grid status report about the stability of the grid.
AgniThe primary Second Life grid to which users connect; named after the Vedic god of Fire, mentioned in the four Vedas. Some images of the Agni grid are available in this wiki.
AditiThe beta test grid available to Residents for testing the Second Life server software before it's deployed to the main grid (Agni); named after the Vedic mother goddess, cosmic creatrix. Read more about Aditi in the preview Grid article.
See also: VaakVaak was a grid used to test interoperability with the Virtual World Region Agent Protocol (VWRAP) family of specifications. VWRAP was the successor to the Open Grid Protocol under the auspices of the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF). Linden Research thanks all Gridnauts who participated in the Open Grid Public Beta. Without your interest, patience, hard work and bug reporting, we would not have been successful. UmaUma is a test grid but has been reported to be now unavailable for the public. |
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Related Articles
- Land units - Simplified information and concepts about some of the above meant for newcomers.
- Wiki articles about land
- Video tutorials about land
- Knowledge Base articles about land