Social MOOs •
LambdaMOO was created alongside the server, and has continued despite server development having slowed. It was the first public MOO. •
JaysHouseMOO was a social MOO started by Jay Carlson at Minnesota State University at Mankato in 1992. It had the first gopher server implemented in MOO language. It was also noted by Netscape as having a web server as well. During the 90's, it was considered the hangout of the MOO programmer elite. Notable among them were former and current LambdaMOO code maintainers Roger Crew, Erik Ostrom, Jay Carlson, and Ben Jackson. •
BayMOO is a social MOO founded in October 1993. It is based on loosely on
San Francisco and its surrounding areas. For part of its life it was hosted at
SFSU. BayMOO also hosted FactoryNet a custom MOO for
NIST. In December 1994 it was one of the MOOs chosen to host
Aerosmith's four-day "Cyberspace Tour" which was co-sponsored by
EFF. Earlier that year it had also hosted a meeting of the
Cypherpunks. Part of SunNET and GNA-NET intermoo networks. •
IDMOO is a New York-based MOO that was started by some programmers from LambdaMOO and PMCMOO who felt that MOO spaces were becoming too dominated by societal conventions developed for nonvirtual spaces. IDMOO was online for several years in the late 1990s and is notable for having hosted an early virtual BDSM community and the
Plaintext Players. •
SchoolNet MOO started in the mid 1990s and was funded by
SchoolNet until 1998, when it was renamed to
MOO Canada, Eh? SchoolNet MOO was particularly popular in the Ottawa, Canada region due to its use by
Virtual Ventures at
Carleton University, and a member of
Actua (known as YES-VACC at these times) as a computer programming educational platform for youths of ages 8–18.
Research MOOs •
MediaMOO is designed for professional media researchers now hosted at Northern Illinois University's Department of English. It was originally created in 1993 by
Amy Bruckman at the Epistemology and Learning Group at the
MIT Media Lab. In its heyday around 1996, MediaMOO had over 1000 members, was governed by an elected council, and hosted frequent meetings, including the Tuesday Cafe, a weekly discussion of members of the Computers and Writing community. It is still accessible, though largely inactive, and is no longer supervised by Bruckman.
Educational MOOs •
Diversity University, the first dedicated educational MOO, created by Jeanne McWhorter in 1993. • '''', a
constructionist learning educational MOO designed for teaching children ages 9 to 13. It was developed by
Amy S. Bruckman in 1996 as her doctoral dissertation work, and cited among "the most notable MOO research in education". It closed in 2007 after 11 years online. •
BioMOO was a professional MOO started by Gustavo Glusman and Jaime Prilusky at the
Weizmann Institute of Science in 1993. It was a virtual place for Biology researchers to meet to brainstorm, hold colloquia and conferences, and explore the serious side of MOOs as a medium. These professional activities were recognized in an article entitled "Cyberspace Offers Chance To Do 'Virtually' Real Science" published in the journal
Science. BioMOO Wizards created a portable subset of the BioMOO server, called the Virtual Conference Center, and submitted it as a paper at a virtual scientific conference and used the VCC to host another virtual scientific conference. BioMOO sported a VR web interface. During its eight years of activity, BioMOO hosted many professional activities including the Virtual School of Natural Sciences' courses on BioComputing and Principles of Protein Structure. Prilusky and Glusman also released in 1994 the File Utilities Package, a MOO server modification enabling direct but controlled access to the underlying file system. Glusman also developed the intermoo GNA Network. •
LinguaMOO is an educational MOO dedicated to general studies of arts and humanities, created in 1995 by Cynthia Haynes of the
University of Texas at Dallas and Jan Rune Holmevik of the
University of Bergen. Many educational MOOs use the enCore system, derived from LinguaMOO, for their MOO database core. Haynes and Holmevik published two books on the educational use of MOOs. •
MundoHispano was founded in 1994 by Lonnie (Turbee) Chu and Kenzi Mudge (Syracuse University), with co-directors Theresa Minick (Kent State University) and Greg Younger (The Economics Institute). It was the first MOO in Spanish, complete with Spanish commands and accents, built for native speakers, learners and teachers of Spanish. At its height it had over 4,000 user accounts logging on from over a dozen countries. •
ATHEMOO started in 1995 at the
University of Hawaiʻi and was an online performance and teaching space for academics and professionals with an interest in theatre. At its height 2200 people were involved in ATHE and ATHEMOO. ==See also==