Virtual reality

Automatically shows Visor’s OS’s 3-Minute Performance

The dive showed a 3-minute walkthrough of the Visor’s software components, which appear to be working.

Who’s Closed? What is Visor?

As of 2020 Immersed has provided free app now available on Meta Quest, Apple Vision Pro, Vive Focus, and Pico that mirrors your PC monitor in VR and allows you to display additional monitors, for up to 5 monitors generally when you pay. The Immersed app supports Windows, Mac, and Linux.

The Visor is a new headset designed entirely around this use case, a lightweight device rather than a general headset for gaming.

Like the Apple Vision Pro, it has a built-in battery and is meant to be used sitting down. The battery also has a Wi-Fi and Bluetooth antenna.

Immersed says the Visor has features of XR2+ Gen 2 chipsetSmall 4K OLED displays, color pass mode, as well as eye tracking and hand tracking for Vision Pro’s pinch-and-pinch mode.

The move comes two weeks after Immersed showed off a skeleton demo that didn’t follow attendees at its first in-person event, including myself, raising concerns about the startup’s capabilities. of moving Visor preorders anytime soon, even a week after it comes out. -the-lens clips headset software, tracking, and passthrough work for the first time.

Hands-On: Demos Installed Barely Functional Visor Headset

Visor embedded reports are the future of remote work. Critics say it’s a scam. Today we attended the first truth-seeking event.

In the accompanying video, Head of Immersed Content Joshua Kurikeshu begins by stating that the connected laptop’s screen will “automatically appear” in front of you when wearing the Visor, promising less friction for this case than the current headsets – even if the Meta is there. working with Microsoft on a wireless solution with low friction as well.

The navigation system continues to reflect the Visor’s UX (user experience) of moving and resizing screens that are used manually, with a point-and-click approach that looks like a concept. and Apple Vision Pro’s visionOS. The Visor software also allows for changing the resolution of the available screens, which is a feature within the theater mode of Meta’s Horizon OS.

The Visor software has its own theater mode, which like the Meta and Apple apps minimizes the immediate environment. Immersed also claims that, like the Apple Vision Pro, the Visor will support 3D movie viewing. More than 150 3D movies on visionOS are offered by Apple TV+ and Disney+, while Immersed has not yet revealed a media partner for this.

About three minutes of the walk takes place in the real world, and only the last ten seconds show more. Immersion describes the transition as “high resolution”, although it doesn’t look very good on video. We’ll be happy to test Visor’s pass when we get a chance.

Visor release, with some loss of quality due to casting.

Assuming that the navigation system is real, which seems to exist, Immersed has shown that the Visor is a working device with management software, not a mockup, although the software may be in its early stages. Whether it can produce headsets anytime soon is still a big open question right now, and we will continue to follow the startup’s progress towards this goal.

My colleague Ian Hamilton tested the Visor alongside Meta Connect last week, and should have feedback soon. But the software he tested wasn’t nearly as advanced as seen in this walkthrough video, and we still don’t recommend pre-ordering the Visor until we or another reliable source tests fully functional hardware and software.

#Automatically #shows #Visors #OSs #3Minute #Performance

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *