You may have to acknowledge that you’re an outlier. Way off the mainstream, in fact.
The reason me and the rest of the mainstream will never ever use any type of passthrough in the way you describe is that you still have a headset strapped to your face. I don’t know if you’ve ever tried to have a conversation with a person using passthrough, but no amount of creepy video of your eyes is going to solve that fact. It doesn’t look normal, it’s never going to look normal and you don’t have to put up with being that weirdo because it turns out monitors are just fine and keep getting better.
So no, the endlessly moving goalposts of HMDs will never get to the bottom of the rainbow where they are a superior alternative to phones and displays. There is simply no feature tradeoff to justify -and I will keep repeating this- strapping a display to your face.
The few VR evangelist stragglers out there keep telling people to wait. You’ll see, it’ll get good enough any second.
But it already got good enough. The people that bounced off of the Quest did not bounce off because of quality. That’s been my point here all along. The Quest 2 is, in fact, good enough for most people. They’ve certainly put up with bigger limitations on handheld devices or flatscreen gaming. Everybody who tries one for the first time has their minds blown. It’s amazingly cool tech.
And exactly none of those people ever consider using it instead of their current screens.
It’s an additive thing, at best, and it fits best for dedicated sessions where you won’t be interrupted by kids or dogs or text messages or have to deal with a sweaty brow or scratching your nose or adjusting your glasses.
No, they’re not old timey. That’s the issue you get from, pardon my language, techbros sometimes. It’s what deceived people into thinking say, crypto was a linear evolutionary process that would eventually replace other aplications doing the same thing. That’s not how it works.
Your smartphone comment is a great explanation of why not, actually. Yes, we’ve all moved to tiny screens and low battery. Why?
Because the device solved problems that we wanted solved and provided features we wanted to have. It wasn’t the tech. People were as crazy about the first iPhone as they are about the 15th iPhone. The tech improvement provides a replacement upgrade path, not a removal of the roadblock to success.
What people wanted from smartphones was a camera in their pocket, the internet available when they want it and a pocketable media player with good enough quality. That was achieved very quickly, now we’re just iterating.
Nobody wants a replacement workstation from VR. That’s not a problem to be solved. Nobody wants a replacement game console either, as it turns out (see the attach rate of the PSVR for evidence of that). Those aren’t problems to solve with better tech.
When the smartphones started exploding the techbros applied that logic to talk about device convergence. “We won’t have PCs anymore man, that’s the past. Everybody is going to be just using their phones”.
But nope, that did not happen. We wanted convergence with cameras, so cameras did get replaced. But PC workstations weren’t. Because that wasn’t a problem that needed a solution. The handsets can do it, look at Samsung Dex. But nobody wants it, so that’s not an application that drives the hardware.
Instead, we got that factor scaled up to tablets, and then people figured a physical keyboard is neat, so we got keyboard covers and now the smartphone tech scales smoothly from a pocket device to a hybrid device to a laptop to a desktop. But the phone? The phone is still for what it was when it was first introduced, despite its limitations, because cameras and portable media were valid use cases.
So yeah, that’s the fundamental misunderstanding. VR is good for sporadic “wow” moments, social gimmickry and a niche industry of gaming and… eh… 3D porn.
It is NOT and it never will be a replacement for workstations, TV gaming or smartphones. Because those are not applications with demand for a new solution. We already know that, the tech is mature enough to know.
Hah. I did not call you a techbro and I was not projecting cryptobro vibes on you specifically…
…but hey, I’m gonna say this makes sense.
Look, I’ve been warning people off wasting money in some of this stuff for fun and profit for a while and I’ve made my point.
Oh, wait, one more thing. You can absolutely use Dex with a normal USB dock, you don’t need any additional hardware and you can absolutely carry any peripherals you need on a small bag and set up a desktop workstation on any screen, both wired and wirelessly.
That’s neither here nor there, but Dex is pretty cool and the one thing I miss from leaving the Samsung ecosystem. I feel I owe them recognizing their good software after all the crap I gave Bixby. Still won’t replace my workstation, though.
You may have to acknowledge that you’re an outlier. Way off the mainstream, in fact.
The reason me and the rest of the mainstream will never ever use any type of passthrough in the way you describe is that you still have a headset strapped to your face. I don’t know if you’ve ever tried to have a conversation with a person using passthrough, but no amount of creepy video of your eyes is going to solve that fact. It doesn’t look normal, it’s never going to look normal and you don’t have to put up with being that weirdo because it turns out monitors are just fine and keep getting better.
So no, the endlessly moving goalposts of HMDs will never get to the bottom of the rainbow where they are a superior alternative to phones and displays. There is simply no feature tradeoff to justify -and I will keep repeating this- strapping a display to your face.
The few VR evangelist stragglers out there keep telling people to wait. You’ll see, it’ll get good enough any second.
But it already got good enough. The people that bounced off of the Quest did not bounce off because of quality. That’s been my point here all along. The Quest 2 is, in fact, good enough for most people. They’ve certainly put up with bigger limitations on handheld devices or flatscreen gaming. Everybody who tries one for the first time has their minds blown. It’s amazingly cool tech.
And exactly none of those people ever consider using it instead of their current screens.
It’s an additive thing, at best, and it fits best for dedicated sessions where you won’t be interrupted by kids or dogs or text messages or have to deal with a sweaty brow or scratching your nose or adjusting your glasses.
It’s not gonna happen.
deleted by creator
No, they’re not old timey. That’s the issue you get from, pardon my language, techbros sometimes. It’s what deceived people into thinking say, crypto was a linear evolutionary process that would eventually replace other aplications doing the same thing. That’s not how it works.
Your smartphone comment is a great explanation of why not, actually. Yes, we’ve all moved to tiny screens and low battery. Why?
Because the device solved problems that we wanted solved and provided features we wanted to have. It wasn’t the tech. People were as crazy about the first iPhone as they are about the 15th iPhone. The tech improvement provides a replacement upgrade path, not a removal of the roadblock to success.
What people wanted from smartphones was a camera in their pocket, the internet available when they want it and a pocketable media player with good enough quality. That was achieved very quickly, now we’re just iterating.
Nobody wants a replacement workstation from VR. That’s not a problem to be solved. Nobody wants a replacement game console either, as it turns out (see the attach rate of the PSVR for evidence of that). Those aren’t problems to solve with better tech.
When the smartphones started exploding the techbros applied that logic to talk about device convergence. “We won’t have PCs anymore man, that’s the past. Everybody is going to be just using their phones”.
But nope, that did not happen. We wanted convergence with cameras, so cameras did get replaced. But PC workstations weren’t. Because that wasn’t a problem that needed a solution. The handsets can do it, look at Samsung Dex. But nobody wants it, so that’s not an application that drives the hardware.
Instead, we got that factor scaled up to tablets, and then people figured a physical keyboard is neat, so we got keyboard covers and now the smartphone tech scales smoothly from a pocket device to a hybrid device to a laptop to a desktop. But the phone? The phone is still for what it was when it was first introduced, despite its limitations, because cameras and portable media were valid use cases.
So yeah, that’s the fundamental misunderstanding. VR is good for sporadic “wow” moments, social gimmickry and a niche industry of gaming and… eh… 3D porn.
It is NOT and it never will be a replacement for workstations, TV gaming or smartphones. Because those are not applications with demand for a new solution. We already know that, the tech is mature enough to know.
deleted by creator
Hah. I did not call you a techbro and I was not projecting cryptobro vibes on you specifically…
…but hey, I’m gonna say this makes sense.
Look, I’ve been warning people off wasting money in some of this stuff for fun and profit for a while and I’ve made my point.
Oh, wait, one more thing. You can absolutely use Dex with a normal USB dock, you don’t need any additional hardware and you can absolutely carry any peripherals you need on a small bag and set up a desktop workstation on any screen, both wired and wirelessly.
That’s neither here nor there, but Dex is pretty cool and the one thing I miss from leaving the Samsung ecosystem. I feel I owe them recognizing their good software after all the crap I gave Bixby. Still won’t replace my workstation, though.