![]() ![]() It also does not sound like a good way to work or do much of anything. But I am skeptical about AR not being disorienting in the long term, moving these windows around every time you adjust your head, with the real world as the background. A dad getting interrupted by his holographic work by his kid kicking a soccer ball at him because this is AR not VR and he can see through it. Conceptually, this is just ridiculous if you think about the logistics of it for more than two seconds. ![]() It’s FaceTime, and the other person is supposed to see some sort of creepy face-scanned version of you instead of, you know, you, which is how an actual FaceTime call works. I think my favorite example is the when someone gets a phone call, and they just so happen to be wearing their headset in a hotel room while unpacking.That will not change when it’s AR instead of VR. Guess how many people I know who watch full movies in VR with a thing on their face? Zero. This is quite literally identical to the VR pitch about pretending you’re in a big theater using a headset. There’s a guy sitting with a bowl of popcorn projecting a big movie screen in front of him.We can ask Microsoft and the Kinect how tactile-free gesture navigation worked out. There’s a guy doing holographic work in his kitchen wearing the headset (conveniently posed so we do not see the cord running down his back into the battery pack in his pocket) and using pinch gestures to move things. ![]()
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