Baby Arc @ Warehouse 21 (Chill Out) 260702

πŸ›οΈ Archived at the Internet Archive: ************************************ https://archive.org/details/doob-net-... 🎧 Artist: Baby Arc πŸ“ Venue: Warehouse πŸ“… Date: 2026-07-02 🎡 Genre: Chill Out 🏒 About Warehouse: β˜… Warehouse 21 β˜… everything except mainstream β˜… group for the underground music club in an industrial/steampunk themed setting β˜… Stay informed about our DJs & live music events. See calendar for regular shows and upcoming events here: πŸ”— click: πŸ”— Link: https://t1p.de/w21 We are a group full of people, who are friends and who are equals. Music connects us and we come together to dance, to chat and to have a good time. Be kind and respect each other. ════════════════════════════════════════ 🌌 About the Virtual Vibes Collection ************************************** About This CollectionThis archive serves as a permanent digital record of virtual performing arts, showcasing the intricate reality of underground 'metaverse' culture within Second Life. Each item highlights the creative labor of residents who design unique avatars, immersive venues, and high-fidelity fashion. It offers a direct window into a world where identity, community, and environment are entirely user-authored. The Automated Observation EngineIn 2024, Proton unleashed the "Automated Observation" engine. By removing the human ego from the editorial process, this system produced over 500 long-form videos in a single year. The resulting archive captures the raw, real-time energy of virtual nightlife. It witnesses the "ghosts in the machine," preserving the random beauty of avatars, interactions, and music exactly as they occurred, entirely free from narrative distortion. Archiving the Digital Dark AgeWe are currently navigating a fragile era of digital history where corporate platforms can wipe out decades of human expression with the flip of a switch. Much like medieval monks silently copying manuscripts to preserve culture that the mainstream ignores, digital archivist proton d-oo-b operates as a guardian of this ephemeral history. By building independent simulators and archiving terabytes of virtual nightlife, this project ensures that a raw, fascinating era of independent electronic music and internet subculture isn't lost to the void. Without this self-directed preservation work, human digital history would suffer a massive blind spot. Guarding the Soul of Immersive ConnectionMainstream tech companies often pitch the "metaverse" as a hyper-monetized tool for remote business meetings or speculative real estate. This collection champions a completely different philosophy: that these spaces are frontiers for genuine, borderless human empathy and collaborative art. By treating virtual worlds as a canvas for live, unedited performances and complex mechanical-acoustic music experiments, this archive proves that technology can be used to deepen human connection rather than isolate us. Cultivating the Micro-CosmosHumankind doesn't just advance through massive, top-down global movements; it thrives because of vibrant digital micro-communities. To the hundreds of artists, musicians, and avatars who have interacted within the d-oo-b network, the Raspberry Jam events, or the Alchemelic listening circles, this cultural footprint is deeply significant. It shapes lives, sparks collaborations, and provides a profound sense of belonging across global borders. The Digital HeritageOn a global scale, this work may be a drop in the ocean of dataβ€”but it is precisely the kind of drop that gives the ocean its character. It represents the essential human drive to create without corporate compromise, to connect across artificial boundaries, and to fiercely protect the creative artifacts of our time so that future generations can understand how we lived, played, and found meaning in the digital dawn. License & Usage: All videos in this collection are licensed under Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International. Note: This license applies exclusively to my original editing, camera work, and directorial choices. It does not grant rights to third-party intellectual property featured in the footage, including but not limited to: music, avatar designs, custom builds, or branded trademarks. Those elements remain the property of their respective copyright holders.