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News

  Google Lively To Shut Down In December
by Leigh Alexander
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November 20, 2008
 
Google Lively To Shut Down In December
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Google is shutting down its Lively embeddable virtual world just about four months after it was first announced, aiming to prioritize its core business.

Revealed in July, Google's Lively allows users to embed virtual rooms inside web pages, decorate them with graphic objects, and create avatars to interact with friends inside the rooms. "We launched Lively in Google Labs because we wanted users to be able to interact with their friends and express themselves online in new ways," reads a post on Google's official blog.

A brief statement on the Lively homepage states simply: "After careful consideration, we have decided to shut down Lively."

"We will shut down Lively on December 31, 2008. Embedded rooms in blogs and other web pages will continue to show an image, but users will no longer be able to enter Lively rooms and interact."

Originally, the service had also incorporated a planned API that would eventually allow users to embed games into Lively.

"Google has always been supportive of this kind of experimentation because we believe it's the best way to create groundbreaking products that make a difference to people's lives," says the post on Google's blog.

"But we've also always accepted that when you take these kinds of risks not every bet is going to pay off. That's why, despite all the virtual high fives and creative rooms everyone has enjoyed in the last four and a half months, we've decided to shut Lively down at the end of the year."

According to Google, all of the project's staff will be relocated to other projects. The move is apparently motivated by the company's need to "prioritize our resources and focus more on our core search, ads and apps business."
 
   
 
Comments

Jason Danforth
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This makes me wonder how well Playstation Home will fare.

Lo Pan
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I tried this, it was very obtuse and limited in avatar creation. The world was empty. Even Second-life had more activity! :-)

Alan Rimkeit
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Home will fare better because it actually has a function as a meeting place for people before and after playing PS3 games on-line. It will become the default on-line meeting place for clans and such to plan their game time.

Google Lively had no function. It was just some other random meeting place like Second Life. If this had even less activity then SL that is just sad because less than 60 thousand people play SL at any given time.

Brice Morrison
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Google can afford to sink wild amounts of money into R&D, but only when they're outrageously profitable. Tough times.


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