Difference between revisions of "Viewerhelp:Communicating with other Residents"

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{{Help Article Ready for Translation}}
{{Translated Help Article||26 Apr 2010}}
 
== Ways to communicate ==
== Ways to communicate ==


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** {{winlink|Conversations}}
** {{winlink|Conversations}}
** {{winlink|Preferences - Chat}}
** {{winlink|Preferences - Chat}}
** '''SLim''' - A lightweight, standalone application that allows you to see who's online and chat with them without using the regular Second Life Viewer. See [https://wiki.secondlife.com/wiki/Linden_Lab_Official:About_the_SLim_Client About the SLim Client].
* '''Voice chat''' - With a microphone and headset attached to your computer, you can use your own voice to speak. Every text chat mode has a voice counterpart, so there's public, private, and group voice. Also see:
* '''Voice chat''' - With a microphone and headset attached to your computer, you can use your own voice to speak. Every text chat mode has a voice counterpart, so there's public, private, and group voice. Also see:
** [https://wiki.secondlife.com/wiki/Voice_FAQ Voice FAQ]
** [https://wiki.secondlife.com/wiki/Voice_FAQ Voice FAQ]

Latest revision as of 15:47, 16 May 2011

KBcaution.png Important: This article has been translated. The translation was imported on 26 Apr 2010. Any changes will require re-export for incremental translation.

Ways to communicate

Second Life offers a variety of ways to communicate with other people, depending on your preference:

Making friends

If you're getting to know someone and want to stay in touch later, you can add them to your friends list. It's easy to do so:

  1. Ask the Resident if you can send them a friendship request.
  2. If they accept, right-click their avatar and choose Add Friend.
    • If they're remote and you're in a conversation, in the instant message window, click Add Friend on the left.
  3. Upon their acceptance, they're added to your friends list.

Second Life has a unique culture with some customs similar to real world ones, and other customs are quite different. For more on socializing in Second Life, see SLetiquette.