• he/him

Coder, pun perpetrator
Grumpiness elemental
Hyperbole abuser


Tools programmer
Writer-wannabe
Did translations once upon a time
I contain multitudes


(TurfsterNTE off Twitter)


Trans rights
Black lives matter


Be excellent to each other


UE4/5 Plugins on Itch
nte.itch.io/

huldratigress
@huldratigress

So, I watched the Marques Brownlee review of the Apple Vision Pro, and what struck me is that it's incredibly technically impressive, but also just...so utterly joyless and boring. Some of the most sophisticated computer vision, imaging, and display tech currently available in service of making an ugly talking head of yourself for Zoom calls. A 40-something Californian tech exec's vision of the future.

There's an incredible amount of irony in that vision; every review I've read has described how the "personas" (a slightly blurry 3D scan of your face) and the eye displays in front land pretty far into the uncanny valley. Vtubers and furries have been getting around this for years now using actual art, but we can't have that. That's too weird, and gives too much freedom over to the user.

Honestly, my biggest hope for the Vision Pro is that it does take off, enough to spawn a new generation of knockoffs that people can hack on for vtuber avatars and weird porn. A VR headset (and don't let Apple's marketing fluff distract you, it's a VR headset) that can accurately track and reproduce facial expressions and head movements is genuinely very cool, and has a lot of potential. It's just not cool when Apple does it. And if this takes off it won't be cool when Google does it either.

But I guess that's the future that cyberpunk always offered us. Building our own world from the scraps of an economy that doesn't actually care about us.


ValerieElysee
@ValerieElysee
This page's posts are visible only to users who are logged in.

zdarlight
@zdarlight

My mom was asking me why VR stuff is still so expensive recently and I told her "because no one's adopting it because all tech companies can think of to do with it is strapping your work desktop to your face."


jaidamack
@jaidamack
Sorry! This post has been deleted by its original author.

Turfster
@Turfster

I don't need a shitty racist A/VR helmet to sap my productivity, that's what meetings do anyway


You must log in to comment.

in reply to @jaidamack's post:

It's not even just that I feel, I think there are good productivity uses for VR/AR tech (e.g. an architect being able to walk around and inside a CAD model to get a better feel for what the building will feel like/show it to the client). But a lot of people can't think beyond "business VRchat" for some reason.

I think the floating screen thing to use a computer on the go is really cool, I want that. I don't need to buy a 3500$ headset to get that (and also the headset wouldn't work with any of my computers – I want this on the Steam Deck), Lenovo has been selling a product like that for a while https://www.lenovo.com/de/de/thinkrealitya3/ and as display tech gets better it'll only become more viable

like day-to-day work purpose the Holodeck isn't used terribly often on Star Trek outside of being a diegetic excuse for oh what could have happened for mystery visualizing