Damn, you can get used cars for $3500? Damn, the floor is like $10k cad (7500usd?) here for something that runs and drives. Registerable can be an extra bit more. Everyone here "knows what they have" and is gouging way above value.
Donโt think they can even do that lmao. I was watching a coworker scroll through its homepage and literally every picture or video was just people doing video conferences or working at home lol. I donโt think I saw a single entertainment product advertised.
I love that they're still using Steve Jobs on their media. The man has been dead and buried for over 12 years, but his ghost still haunts the minds of these dorks.
The problem with ar is that itโs promise isnโt improved quality of life for white collar workers, but increased productivity from the skilled labor pool by allowing a carrot and stick approach of huds with condensed centuries of experiential information and an unprecedented level of tracking.
The goal is to make it easier to slap anyone into a position that would currently provide a decent wage by giving them a computer that says โdescribed symptoms indicate probable seal failureโ & highlights the bolts to take out in robocop dick shoota vision and then beeps insistently when theyโre on smoke break too long.
But they need to develop the technology first, and white collar workers are willing to buy and use the thing but canโt provide the kind of feedback that developers are looking for.
TFW you know the seal is fine and you can obviously see the cracked housing is leaking, but your face-computer makes you waste 15 minutes fixing the wrong thing. And then it complains you're the one wasting time when your break is 45 seconds longer than the legal minimum.
I see AR being used a lot in manufacturing, and mechanic roles in particular. Boeing, for example, uses Hololens with it's mechanics to simulate airplane repairs.
Microsoft is really the only company targeting AR at the blue-collar worker, while most of the other AR companies target those white-collar workers.
Thereโs a lot of bad stuff you can say about Microsoft, but you can say โthis is where you need to be, it itโs not gonna turn a profit for a decade.โ And they have a better chance of recognizing the wisdom than many other big tech companies.
Fantastic long term vision hobbled by awful short and medium term thinking and an unwillingness to abandon existing userbases.
Maybe it does dox me... we are using AR for power plant related tasks with some components for which we have service contracts with a third party and the manufacturers. Really does increase productivity quite a bit, still in most cases the people 30 years on the job and who know the machines well after decades on them can deal with most, too. However not always and there are a couple of them who do not actually have a mental model of the machinery and they could profit from that, too.
Tools can emancipate us, or be pressures on wages and the labour class. The question is who controls them, how they are used and in most countries also what kind of policies alter their usage.
this things selling point being nothing but "a screen you can't look away from" genuinely feels like a tipping point for the way consumer electronics are going
I looked at this thing last year and it was pretty obvious it's not intended to compete in the VR market, it's intended to be a platform that is used by enthusiasts alone. The intent seems to be to use it to build an app base that will then go on to be the foundation of a mass market AR device that they intend to release later.
If that's the explanation in the video I agree with it. But I dunno, they might have a totally different explanation. The general point is that you can't release an AR device to a mass market by itself with no apps though, so you need a strategy to get apps made beforehand, especially as the Google Glass strategy was already a clear failure.
I know a guy who interns at a tech company and his whole job for the last six months was making an app for this thing, so at least some people are trying to get ahead of the curb
โThe Vision Pro is badโ
But that is also good?
Iโm tired.
I think itโs a neat/best vr headset, but I think most of the spacial computing stuff is dumb.
Having your emails floating above your desk in the office is stupid.
Useful things for augmented reality - pulling up diagnostic/data on things by looking at them like in a video game. Helping me find the wall-stud and level things.
It's so fucking funny that you've invented this audio visual immersion pod, completely encapsulating yourself in an artifical world, and the best tool for organizing your work is still just digital graph paper.
The Medicis had "a big dark room full of ledger books" 600 years ago. Now you can live like a medieval Italian accountant for the low, low price of a month's salary.
Stud finders cost like $8, you can probably get a shitty level for the same price, sometimes I just measure from the ground and mark two points with a pencil.
โsweetyโ used to be a common false endearment to condescend to people on Twitter and people began to make fun of the practice by intentionally misspelling it