2015: The Year That Lazy Tech Kills Us All
Who needs running shoes when you've got a one-man arse-powered mobile seat to get around on?
Who needs running shoes when you've got a one-man arse-powered mobile seat to get around on?
Reactions: hammy and nuts. So, a bit like porn, then.
Oculus doesn't know how to make a VR controller, so is setting its Story Studio the task of getting the masses in goggles.
Hong Kong Unrest was shot with six GoPro cameras attached to a long boom pole and stitched together post production, which is the best VR equipment hack I've ever heard of.
I don't want to look stupid even when I can't see myself.
The next frontier of computing seems, inevitably, the space directly in front of our faces. But will Microsoft be the scene's conquistador?
I just put Microsoft's new holographic glasses on my face. It's one of the most amazing and tantalising experiences I've ever had with a piece of technology.
Finally somebody's building something actually useful for Oculus Rift that's not just a damn advertisement.
JCVD once again ahead of the curve.
CES 2015: There's a hot new virtual reality headset in town. At least that's what the booth decorations would have you believe. It's got head tracking! It's fully immersive! It's an Oculus Killer! Nope. The 3DHead VR set uses a tablet for its screen, is therefore massive, and ridiculous.
CES 2015: The Sulon Cortex is basically part Oculus, part Kinect. It actually doesn't use either of those gadgets, but the end result is a mix of the two concepts.
CES 2015: Oculus has added 3D positional audio to its already mindblowing Crescent Bay demo, and it's even better than before.
CES 2015: Why yes, it does look just like an Oculus Rift developer kit!
CES 2015: Now that our eyes are being plugged into these virtual experiences, how can we bring the rest of us—our hands, our bodies, and our feet? 3DRudder is a solution for the latter.
CES 2015: It's headphones you can put over your eyes when company gets too boring to even make eye contact with.
Milk VR aspires to be a YouTube of virtual reality.