A couple days ago on Saturday May 9, there was an article in the Belliseria Bureau of Bureaucracy's "Gazette." Written by Liberty Fairelander, it was a goodbye to a longtime friend of the BBB, who made news the week before due to his sudden exit from Linden Lab, "Farewell Patch Linden."
From our vantage point, Patch was never just a name on an org chart. He was a builder of worlds. Not in the abstract. Not in a distant, corporate sense — but in a deeply tangible way residents understand; coastlines we walk, homes we love, communities we belong to. Bellisseria did not simply appear one day — it was cultivated, expanded, and protected by vision, persistence, and an uncommon understanding of what residents actually needed. Patch brought all three.
He was a friend to the BBB. He had one of our first passports. We worked alongside him in big and small moments. From major celebrations where he stood with residents as one of us, to quiet conversations that helped shape experiences behind the scenes. He listened, and then he acted. Not symbolically. Practically. That matters more than people sometimes realise.
He was a friend to the BBB. He had one of our first passports. We worked alongside him in big and small moments. From major celebrations where he stood with residents as one of us, to quiet conversations that helped shape experiences behind the scenes. He listened, and then he acted. Not symbolically. Practically. That matters more than people sometimes realise.
... Patch showed up. Again and again. For residents. For events. For the
community. Whether it was a formal appearance, a colleague’s birthday
surprise or a moment of shared laughter at a gathering, he never felt
distant from the world he helped steward for nearly twenty years. That’s
not something you mandate in a job description. That’s character.
That’s commitment.
... Patch’s legacy is not a single project or initiative—it is woven into the everyday experience of Second Life® itself. So, from all of us at the Bellisserian
Bureau of Bureaucracy—leadership, ambassadors, and bureaucrats — we
offer both our gratitude and our respect. Thank you, Patch, for the
worlds you helped build, the communities you helped nurture, and the
countless moments — seen and unseen — where your work made a difference.
Wherever your path leads next, we have no doubt you’ll leave it better
than you found it.
The article in it's entirety can be read in The Gazette.

No comments:
Post a Comment