Can be an app that exists on other platforms or a new idea, as long as you don’t mind sharing.

Since we’re still a relatively small magazine it might be fun to have a conversation starter as a sticky post each week. Next Saturday I’ll start a thread to collect ideas for the following week’s question!

  • AshDene@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    Let me walk around and build a 3d model of a house/building/garden/…

    Then let me start adding and deleting things sims style on a miniature version displayed on a desk.

    And then let me show that to clients. Preferably with an option to do it live in front of them.

  • hamo@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    Cities skyline in vr where the geography is modelled off your interior. i.e. the sofa in your living room could be a hill and you have to zone for buildings around walls or tables etc.

  • astrodad@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    I do a lot of audio/video installations. I’d love to be able to get real-time measurements of spaces I’m working in, and then use an app to “draw” a plan of what needs to go where, etc, that I could export and share with a customer Throw in a visualizer for spatially testing the audio acoustics of the space and I’d sell my soul.

  • ansik@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    Apple Maps with look-around

    Google street-view has already been a small game changer to my line of work, previously we had to go on location to check local conditions for quotations and now it’s often enough to check street-view and I believe even more “local presence” you’d get with this headset might be helpful for that.

    I’m hoping Apple has had the Vision Pro on the roadmap long enough that their cars are capturing stereoscopic images…

  • tootsweet@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    3D immersive art installations would be amazing. I can see contemporary artists and art museums taking advantage of this technology to create amazing art experiences. Live performances could incorporate AR elements to their shows, things that are not possible in the meat world.

  • blake@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    The headset is just asking for a virtual pet game to be created for it. Think Niantic’s newer Peridot game, but less grossly monetized.

  • dont_even_bother_@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    Really simple - Plex. I would be happy simply consuming my media on a big screen. I am very curious to see how the image fidelity is, if there is any chromatic aberration, how clear text is, and how convincing it is. I tried bigscreen on oculus and was not impressed at all. The font scaling combined with the display and lens quality made it unusable.

  • trixter@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    I have a Meta Quest 2 through no fault of my own and honestly a meditation app that’s actually got good development and solid hardware behind it would be a lifesaver.

  • gormster@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    Trying out art on my actual walls. I know I can kind of do that right now with ARKit, but it’s not great; it’s the kind of thing that Vision will handle beautifully. Also bringing home furniture. I’m looking for a new dining table, and the idea that I have to just drop two grand on this thing when I’ve only ever really imagined it in the space is kind of nuts. Sure, I can tape it out on the ground to see how big it is, check it fits, but that’s still not going to help me know how it feels in the room.

    I think it also would have been great recently when I got about fifty swatches of material in the post for blinds. While I think seeing the real thing is still going to be necessary, seeing the full blinds in Vision would have helped immensely.

  • blobcat@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    I would love to actually see something using the AR aspect, so far everything I’ve seen is nothing more than floating panels in the air, which ig, you can already do in VR no problem.

    • conciselyverbose@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      You could already do it in VR with sufficient pixel density.

      There’s really nothing out there (and definitely not cheaper) that’s a real option for a virtual display with heavy text.

  • fryman@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    I don’t want to hate on AR/VR, I think it has its place, but I feel like adding more information and more technology in our faces is going in the wrong trajectory. So far it isolates us more from the people right in front of us. I guess if it turns out that with AR we can exist in the same room as friends and family that live in different places in a way that isn’t weird, then that might change my mind.

    • tojikomori@kbin.socialOP
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      1 year ago

      It’s interesting: Vision Pro is the first headset with so many features intended to reduce isolation – EyeSight, Breakthrough, AudioPods – but it seems to get this criticism much more than others. (It’s not just you: a lot of people feel this way, and Apple’s attempts to address the issue don’t invalidate the viewpoint.)

      I wonder if it’s because Apple’s marketing is the closest most people have come to seeing a headset used in actual public spaces or in everyday life, as opposed to seeing it in the isolated rooms and workspaces of Meta, Microsoft, and Sony’s marketing. By drawing attention to their workarounds, Apple’s also drawing attention to the issue.

      It reminds me of the increase in public concern about stalking after Apple released AirTags – the first keychain tracking device with features intended to combat stalking. Tile had been on the market for years at that point, but it was Apple that received the criticism because they’d drawn awareness to the issue.

      I’m also old enough that I remember these same concerns being raised about personal stereos, and it was certainly true: earphones are still my favorite way to shut out my surrounding environment, especially somewhere noisy like a bus or train. But it’s not as though the older generation complaining about them were engaged in empathy-expanding conversation with each other: they’d bury themselves in books and newspapers in the surrounding seats.

  • JoshHolme@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    The biggest issue with the headset right now(aside from the price) is the battery life. 2 hours needs to be extended to at least 4 I think.

    • conciselyverbose@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      The battery takes USB C and lets you use it indefinitely plugged in. We’ll have to see the power draw but there effectively has to be the ability to use a third party battery pack with the official one.

      The price is high but for what it is I think it’s super aggressive honestly. I don’t think you’d find anyone else bringing a dumb headset at that resolution and latency without passthrough or the fact that it’s a computer for much under $2k.

      (Definitely out of my budget, but I’m using it as motivation to get my shit together and finally start writing apps to sell and see if I can make enough to justify the price to myself.)

      • linus@kbin.social
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        1 year ago

        Has there been any confirmation on whether the USB-C port is exclusively for charging, or can you connect peripherals through it as well?

        And while we’re at it, any idea how much storage it has?

        • Phroon@kbin.social
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          1 year ago

          We know very little yet, but there was mention that it can use Bluetooth accessories like a keyboard or a trackpad.

      • JoshHolme@kbin.social
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        1 year ago

        Even with that, I’d like the battery to be hot swappable but it seems that if you swap batteries the headset hard shuts off

        • conciselyverbose@kbin.social
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          1 year ago

          Unless they had another battery in the headset itself (more weight), there isn’t really another way to do it. The choices they made all make sense (though I’d prefer support for arbitrary desktop apps, which I’m assuming won’t be a thing).

          If I do manage to earn enough extra cash to justify the cost, I’ll likely get a significantly bigger battery and rig up a pouch or mini backpack or something for longer portable use when I want to do that. But there is a reason they’re sticking to a proprietary connector. It means you can do all the power regulation in the block and just receive it where it needs to be on the part on your face, which means less weight.

  • Tubeless5812@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    4 or 5yrs ago I built a Banana for scale AR app, that I never published, where you could place a fairly realistic 3D model of a banana in a scene from your viewfinder.

    While jumping on a bandwagon a bit, the idea was to use it for a vague measurement of objects but it mostly just turned into the fun of putting pictures of bananas in random places.

    So if I ever get a Vision Pro… probably that.

    If normalising the use of AR headsets in public ever becomes a thing I think it could be fun to have virtual geocaches around… Provided it can be done safely.

    • AshDene@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      virtual geocaches

      PokemonGo lol

      That might actually be a great app for making it normal to wander around in a headset.