I mean yeah it’s obvious that it’s an oportunity for making money on a new marked and so on, but, even if it’s a bit silly, dreaming of VR technology like in Ready Player One(minus the distopian world) for real life it feels like the bad guys already won, when we will have the technology. Like the omni One is just about to be launched for the market and it’s sold in a bundle with the pico 4, which is owned by Tik Tok. Do you get what is grinding my gears about that?

  • Ephera@lemmy.ml
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    8 months ago

    Personally, I actually expect VR to disappear from the market once more, or at least for there to be a long gap before the next stuff comes out.
    In fact, I think, the Apple headset was the last notable hardware release of the current hype wave.

    So, yeah, the big privacy-invasive companies would definitely be a dealbreaker for me, but I don’t think this cycle really matters yet.

    • xmunk@sh.itjust.works
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      8 months ago

      Beat Saber is ridiculously awesome… but I never want to wear a fucking headset to do my work.

      VR is useful for recreation not business.

      • skulblaka@startrek.website
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        8 months ago

        You don’t want to wear the current iteration of headsets for work. Projects are in motion to make much smaller and more lightweight ones. They’re stupid expensive right now but that’ll change with time.

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          8 months ago

          I value my eyesight. I never want to have a backlit screen three inches from my eyes for eight straight hours. I, personally, use a projector for gaming to try and minimize how much strain I put on my eyes.

          Working in VR is immensely unhealthy and there simply isn’t a work around for it.

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            8 months ago

            The brightness of the sky outside dwarfs that of any display we can make, much less a tiny VR display. If they could squeeze the nits needed to make a VR screen look like real life into a display that small while retaining the quality, they would.

            It might actually hurt your vision because it’s not bright enough, much like trying to read under a dim light starts to cause eye strain.

            • xmunk@sh.itjust.works
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              8 months ago

              The human body is complex and we don’t understand everything that’s going in but heavy phone usage is strongly correlated with myopia - maybe that’s because people suffering from near sightedness really love their phones… but I think I’m going to need strong evidence that it’s not the more obvious reason before accepting that explanation.

              VR might actually improve vision because the light level is extremely consistent but early studies don’t support that conclusion. I think long term VR usage is DOA, it’s fun as hell to beat some sabers or spin up elite dangerous, but it should be done in moderation… and definitely shouldn’t be required for 40 hours a week unless we get some really compelling studies.

              • teawrecks@sopuli.xyz
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                8 months ago

                Phones are different because your eyes are focusing at a point a foot in front of you, whereas in VR that shouldn’t be the case. You’re focusing on a simulated point a couple of meters out in the distance, though it is usually is still fixed.

                Make no mistake, I’m not saying wearing VR for hours every day is healthy, for your eyes or otherwise, I’m only responding to your claim about screen brightness. I don’t think any VR displays have even hit 1000 nits yet, and on the displays that have, that’s peak brightness, the whole display can’t use all that energy at once, only small sections at a time. Meanwhile the sky is on the order of 10,000+ nits. The brightness of the sun will certainly hurt your eyes at over a billion nits.

                I would love for an optometrist to explain why I’m wrong though.

      • Ephera@lemmy.ml
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        8 months ago

        Originally, I had typed out that IMHO VR never made it beyond being a gimmick. And yeah, Beat Saber is pretty much the reason why I decided to reformulate. Some people buy VR goggles primarily to play Beat Saber. If they’re frequently doing so, then they’re getting their money’s worth out of it, then that is absolutely legit.

        And well, I imagine, there will be use-cases for business, like being able to walk around in a CAD design or architecture draft, that’s probably useful, too. But yeah, just for taking a call, I actively don’t want to be embedded into a 3D world every time.

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    8 months ago

    I’ve got a quest and meta feels like an overly attached ex girlfriend. The setup experience was terrible, simply because of the meta crap they hacked into the oculus experience.

  • Arthur Besse@lemmy.ml
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    8 months ago

    I think it’s pretty great that Zuckerberg went all-in on the thankfully-wrong bet that his Second Life knockoff would somehow be popular and that people would actually want to strap a computer on their face to use it. 🤡

    Which is to say, VR isn’t particularly high on the list of things I’m concerned about giant tech companies’ control of.

    I recommend reading The Verge’s review of the Apple Vision Pro which concludes:

    Apple may have inadvertently revealed that some of these core ideas are actually dead ends — that they can’t ever be executed well enough to become mainstream. This is the best video passthrough headset ever made, and that might mean camera-based mixed reality passthrough could just be a road to nowhere. This is the best hand- and eye-tracking ever, and it feels like the mouse, keyboard, and touchscreen are going to remain undefeated for years to come.

    As someone who doesn’t want to live in a world where head-mounted cameras in public spaces become ubiquitous or even socially acceptable, I found that review to be good news.

    • Niquarl@lemmy.ml
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      8 months ago

      I agree the idea of people wearing some Google glasses does kinda terrify me. At least with a phone you can see when somebody is filming you or not paying attention to you but reading their emails or whatever.

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    8 months ago

    It’s certainly not ideal but is probably necessary to develop the technology. In a handful of years I’m hoping there will be less toxic options.

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    8 months ago

    I think that most companies have been doing it absolutely wrong. Likely because they’re more interested in sucking more data from people to sell for profit than designing products that would appreciably improve people’s lives. Most of the handful of genuinely useful products are kept priced far too high for consumers. Apple, as insanely expensive as their product is, actually does seem to have identified some of the major issues that others have been completely ignoring but their implementation is a bit ridiculous.

    The two companies that I know of that are actually making useful products are Xreal and Viture (haven’t tried the latter but they’re much my FOSS-friendly). For the price of a quality monitor/TV, they provide HMDs in a sunglasses form-factor that are actually usable for productivity despite only having 1080p displays. And don’t have creepy cameras. Yes, the lower FOV makes them less immersive but that’s actually beneficial - you can talk to and see other people in the “real” world. This and low weight makes them comfortable to wear all day and I’ve barely used my laptop or Steam Deck monitor since getting them setup.

  • Snot Flickerman@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    8 months ago

    Like a lot of hyped things, people still can’t actually functionally figure out good VR/AR applications that people would willingly strap a hot, heavy headset to their face for long periods. Nobody has time for that, most people are social and want to actually be around other people and not behind headsets. The terminally online and introverted are in the minority in humanity.

    People who drive around wearing them in their Cybertrucks are a special subset of stupid. They obviously have not figured out anything helpful to do with them, either. This is why they are doing dangerous stunts instead of anything useful.

    Also Valve is still a pretty big name in VR and I wouldn’t ignore the work they have done and seem to be continuing to do based on the Valve Index and rumors swirling about an Index 2 in the works. Valve is probably one of the few major players who take some amount of openness to their approach.

  • snooggums@midwest.social
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    8 months ago

    I don’t think about VR produxts from those kinds of companies at all any more than their evil apps and websites.

  • blackstrat@lemmy.fwgx.uk
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    8 months ago

    I don’t give a shit. I can’t imagine ever using VR for anything other than a curious novelty. It’ll go the way of 3D TVs and keep going around and around every 20 years or so.

  • SubArcticTundra@lemmy.ml
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    8 months ago

    (Copying my comment from YT):

    I fear AR will change society for the worse while making Facebook a lot of money. The reason why the internet currently has a bad effect on society is because it lets you block out the bad parts of reality while locking yourself a cozy bubble of content that suits you personally. Applying the same filter to people’s vision will only exasperate these effects. And a shift to AR will benefit Facebook massively: now, instead of just being able to influence what ads/posts you see, they will have the power to choose what parts of reality you percieve. Nobody will percieve the same reality anymore. Can you still see society being able to reach consensus then? Problems that are currently public will become private problems of those who cannot afford the AR to block them out. And all for Facebooks profit.

    A truly responsible attempt at AR would focus on technologies that create the same experience for multiple – ideally an unlimited amount – of people. Think 3D tabletop diaplays, smart objects (think reMarkable tablet), holograms. This is accessible to anyone in the room (= inclusive), and guarantees that everybody will still be locked into the same, shared experience of reality.