http://www.hyperorg.com/blogger

Oculus Rift

I just received Google’s Oculus Rift emulator. Given that it’s made of 
cardboard, it’s all kinds of awesome.

https://www.oculus.com
https://www.google.com/get/cardboard

Google Cardboard is a poke in Facebook’s eyes. Facebook bought Oculus Rift, the 
virtual reality headset, for $2Billion. Oculus hasn’t yet shipped a product, 
but its prototypes are mind-melting. My wife and I tried one last year at an 
Israeli educational tech lab, and we literally had to have people’s hands on 
our shoulders so we wouldn’t get so disoriented that we’d swoon. The Lab had us 
on a virtual roller coaster, with the ability to turn our heads to look around. 
It didn’t matter that it was an early, low-resolution prototype. Swoon.

Oculus is rumored to be priced at around $350 when it ships, and they will sell 
tons at that price. Basically, anyone who tries one will be a customer or will 
wish s/he had the money to be a customer. 

Will it be confined to game players? Not a chance on earth.

https://www.facebook.com/zuck/posts/10101319050523971

So, in the midst of all this justifiable hype about the Oculus Rift, Google 
announced Cardboard: detailed plans for how to cut out and assemble a holder 
for your mobile phone that positions it in front of your eyes. The Cardboard 
software divides the screen in two and creates a parallaxed view so you think 
you’re seeing in 3D. It uses your mobile phone’s kinetic senses to track the 
movement of your head as you purview your synthetic domain.

I took a look at the plans for building the holder and gave up. For $15 I 
instead ordered one from Unofficial Cardboard.

https://www.unofficialcardboard.com

When it arrived this morning, I took it out of its shipping container (made out 
of cardboard, of course), slipped in my HTC mobile phone, clicked on the Google 
Cardboard software, chose a demo, and was literally — in the virtual sense — 
flying over the earth in any direction I looked, watching a cartoon set in a 
forest that I was in, or choosing YouTube music videos by turning to look at 
them on a wall.

Obviously I’m sold on the concept. 

But I’m also sold on the pure cheekiness of Google’s replicating the core 
functionality of the Oculus Rift by using existing technology, including one 
made of cardboard.

--

Cheers,
Stephen


_______________________________________________
Link mailing list
[email protected]
http://mailman.anu.edu.au/mailman/listinfo/link

Reply via email to