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In reply to the discussion: Are Smartphones Doomed to the Same Fate as Personal Computers? [View all]MowCowWhoHow III
(2,103 posts)61. Eventually once they offload the audio/visual and sensors into wearables
This might be a step in that direction ($0.5 billion suggests it's not vapourware)
Magic Leap
A startup is betting more than half a billion dollars that it will dazzle you with its approach to creating 3-D imagery.
Availability: 1-3 years
Logically, I know there isnt a hulking four-armed, twisty-horned blue monster clomping in circles in front of me, but it sure as hell looks like it.
Im sitting behind a workbench in a white-walled room in Dania Beach, Florida, in the office of a secretive startup called Magic Leap. Im staring wide-eyed through a pair of lenses attached to what looks like metal scaffolding that towers over my head and contains a bunch of electronics and lenses. Its an early prototype of the companys so-called cinematic-reality technology, which makes it possible for me to believe that the muscular beast with the gruff expression and two sets of swinging arms is actually in the room with me, hovering about seven feet in front of my face.
Hes not just visible at a set distance. Im holding a video-game controller thats connected to the demo station, and at the press of a button I can make the monster smaller or larger, move him right or left, bring him closer, or push him farther away.
Of course, I bring him as near as possible; I want to see how real he looks up close. Now hes about 30 inches from my eyeballs and, though Ive made him pocket-sized, looks about as authentic as a monster couldhe seems to have rough skin, muscular limbs, and deep-set beady eyes. I extend my hand to give him a base to walk on, and I swear I feel a tingling in my palm in expectation of his little feet pressing into it. When, a split second later, my brain remembers that this is just an impressively convincing 3-D image displayed in the real space in front of me, all I can do is grin.
More: https://www.technologyreview.com/s/534971/magic-leap/
A startup is betting more than half a billion dollars that it will dazzle you with its approach to creating 3-D imagery.
Availability: 1-3 years
Logically, I know there isnt a hulking four-armed, twisty-horned blue monster clomping in circles in front of me, but it sure as hell looks like it.
Im sitting behind a workbench in a white-walled room in Dania Beach, Florida, in the office of a secretive startup called Magic Leap. Im staring wide-eyed through a pair of lenses attached to what looks like metal scaffolding that towers over my head and contains a bunch of electronics and lenses. Its an early prototype of the companys so-called cinematic-reality technology, which makes it possible for me to believe that the muscular beast with the gruff expression and two sets of swinging arms is actually in the room with me, hovering about seven feet in front of my face.
Hes not just visible at a set distance. Im holding a video-game controller thats connected to the demo station, and at the press of a button I can make the monster smaller or larger, move him right or left, bring him closer, or push him farther away.
Of course, I bring him as near as possible; I want to see how real he looks up close. Now hes about 30 inches from my eyeballs and, though Ive made him pocket-sized, looks about as authentic as a monster couldhe seems to have rough skin, muscular limbs, and deep-set beady eyes. I extend my hand to give him a base to walk on, and I swear I feel a tingling in my palm in expectation of his little feet pressing into it. When, a split second later, my brain remembers that this is just an impressively convincing 3-D image displayed in the real space in front of me, all I can do is grin.
More: https://www.technologyreview.com/s/534971/magic-leap/
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The only reason they cost $500 is because they are made overseas with cheap labor.
LiberalFighter
May 2016
#19
When all they offer in the new version is a slightly better camera, moving the headphone port to the
hughee99
May 2016
#34
2GBs is a 1.5 hour movie download. Nice to get but hardly a deal breaker. n/t
RichVRichV
May 2016
#49
Planned obsolescence, it's been working for the automobile industry for decades
tularetom
May 2016
#6
I was gonna go Apple but I use connectify, and they dont have one for Apple
Jackie Wilson Said
May 2016
#33
Smartphones have come a long way but seem to have peaked in performance/abilities
FLPanhandle
May 2016
#5
I had my old non-texting cell phone for 10 years before the battery would no longer hold a charge.
CrispyQ
May 2016
#8
by the time the tower improvements to make faster network finally reach where i live
dembotoz
May 2016
#16
I just bought a small PC, and wish it was smaller... The boxes are unnecessarily huge to
underahedgerow
May 2016
#52
Its called market saturation, it happens with pretty much every durable consumer good...
Humanist_Activist
May 2016
#46
expensive overpriced phones have peaked. Going forward it will not be apple seeing growth.
Egnever
May 2016
#57
Eventually once they offload the audio/visual and sensors into wearables
MowCowWhoHow III
May 2016
#61