Germs/bacteria were not even 1% of what was running through my brain.
You're not the target audience for this, nor am I anymore.
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Germs/bacteria were not even 1% of what was running through my brain.
You're not the target audience for this, nor am I anymore.
Everything spontaneous was empty.
So more like event based like cinema than a hang out space
I own a Valve Index and I mostly don't play it because of it's just really a hassle to have to physically stand up (or even seated) and to wave your arms around, only to forget how to reload your damn gun after a couple of weeks/months of not playing.
I wish that people built simple keyboard-and-mouse VR games that I could enjoy the VRness of the experience using my fingers and palms like I'm used to in the past 30 years.
I want CSGO VR, not a good-looking-cheap-knock-off that I need to figure out how to reload each gun and where to draw the grenade from. I want Cities Skylines VR where I can see my city from above wherever I look. I want Red Alert VR.
The most enjoyable games I currently have that is worth whipping VR out for are those I can play with a regular XBox controller which I'm quite familiar with already.
Did you never just tried that out?
Lime you can stay seated in Skyrim and co
No sir. The idea of virtual reality and "holograms" is at least here since the early 20th century. It's just that these people burnt billions of dollars on some tacky tech demos and empty marketing promises, and the industry believed them for years.
I think the illusion was the problem. Suck wanted it to work without realizing his gadget.
I'm much more curious if Tim will really release apples version and if it will burn him.
And I only mean for broad consumer vr/ar not for industry etc.
Forcing a worker to wear a headset is much easier and there are fast financial benefits. Alone when you can train someone virtual before letting them on the real thing.
When I look at where we would be if I had kept the job, we would be homeowners, be able to buy new clothes regularly, go to restaurants and take awesome vacations a few times a year.
But the missing thing would be autonomy. The reason why I’m willing to sacrifice so much is because i fundamentally don’t like having to follow orders from a boss or manager. I’m arrogant enough to think i know better, and want to prove it by actually building my own thing.
Regardless of how silly it sounds on a financial level, the calculation makes sense once we look at the sense of ownership and autonomy over our own work. It’s worth more to me than any money I could make.
Ps: if you’re curious, the startup is logology.co
I find it very interesting that you value 'any startup' more than owning your own flat for example