In this case, "o" means object. It's an attempt at using the "systems" variation of hungarian notation.
There are two types of hungarian: Systems and Apps. Systems uses a prefix to identify the type of data stored. For example, the "i" in iCounter would indicate that the variable was an integer.
Apps hungarian took a completely different approach and specifies that the prefix should indicate the purpose of the data. For example, the "rw" in rwPosition would mean row.
The windows api used Systems hungarian. This led to a large number of other programmers also using it. The unfortunate aspect is that when changes were made to the api, they kept the old variable names even when the actual data type changed. This led to large amounts of confusion as to what data type a parameter to a given API function should be passed. Especially around various handles.
In the .Net coding guidelines, MS explicitly states that hungarian shouldn't be used. The reality is that they are talking about "Systems" hungarian; which I 100% agree with. "Apps" hungarian on the other hand has a ton of uses as you are describing the data, not the type.
At the end of the day just remove the "o". It adds nothing to the program.
Oh, and for interesting reading, check out Joel's take on this at: http://www.joelonsoftware.com/articles/Wrong.html