this post was submitted on 03 Jan 2025
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I'm not going to say we're hitting a wall but there's a serious hurdle here. The tech to make the AR/VR experience truly pleasant doesn't really exist yet, and even once we get the tech nailed down it's going to be really expensive
The shot that Apple took and I kind of agree with it, to a point, is that immersive VR is a secondary concern. It's a game. It's an occasional escape. Occasionally, you'll throw yourself into a virtual world and hide away for a bit but it's not where you're going to spend most of your time.
AR is what we need to tackle. We need a bright clear high-res overlay capable of doing at least 90°. It needs to be close enough to the size and weight of a pair of glasses to wear comfortably. Maybe we stop carrying around the tablet sized cell phones and move back to candy bars that push the display for the glasses.
Meta has a somewhat promising looking prototype that costs $10,000 to manufacture.
The quest definitely scratched the itch for VR. It's a great platform, super cheap, and as magic for short to medium balance of playing around in virtual worlds. But we need a tool, something that improves our existing lives not something that replaces them.