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posted by takyon on Saturday September 17 2016, @01:09PM   Printer-friendly
from the augmented-unreality dept.

What's Popular in Virtual Reality's 3-D World? Netflix and TV.

Companies such as Samsung and Facebook's Oculus promote their virtual-reality headsets by highlighting awe-inspiring 3-D experiences for gaming and virtual travel. But one of the most popular activities among early adopters of the technology is less novel: watching 2-D movies and TV.

"It's been a surprise on the VR circuit because much of the work is driven by people coming from the gaming world, who are fairly dogmatic about what VR means," says Anjney Midha, founder of the San Francisco venture capital fund KPCB Edge. Figuring out what people want to do with headsets is crucial if companies such as Facebook are to make the devices widely popular.

Midha says consumer interest in a new way to view 2-D content shouldn't be surprising given the popularity of watching movies and TV on mobile devices with small screens. A 2-D video viewed using a VR headset can fill your visual field as if you were watching on a giant home cinema screen, even if you're in fact in a cramped dorm room or the middle seat on a budget flight. Virtual-reality apps from Netflix and Hulu even surround their 2-D content with a virtual theater, room, or beach scene to enhance the experience. Flat content is less likely to make you uncomfortable or nauseous, as 3-D content can.

People use the headsets in 3D reality to enter a 3D virtual reality where they can experience a 2D representation of 3D reality.

VR Arrives at Tokyo Game Show, Counted On to Revive Industry

Virtual reality has arrived for real at the Tokyo Game Show, one of the world's biggest exhibitions for the latest in fun and games.

That's evident everywhere. Players at the booths are donning chunky headgear covering their eyes and ears, immersed in their own worlds, shooting imaginary monsters or dancing with virtual partners, at Makuhari Messe hall in the Tokyo suburb of Chiba.

The show, which gave a preview to reporters Thursday ahead of its opening to the public over the weekend, features 614 companies demonstrating more than 1,500 game software titles.

It's still anyone's guess how VR will play out as a business in years ahead. But most everyone agrees that's the way of the future. And Yasuo Takahashi, director at Sony Interactive Entertainment, the game division of Japanese electronics and entertainment giant Sony Corp., believes 2016 will mark VR's debut year, helping revive an industry that has languished with the advent of smart phones.

Is the video game industry in need of reviving?


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  • (Score: 2, Informative) by Anonymous Coward on Saturday September 17 2016, @04:47PM

    by Anonymous Coward on Saturday September 17 2016, @04:47PM (#403174)

    You lost me at the part about people with one eye not being allowed to drive. I have only one eye and I have driven over 30 years without an accident. Yes, I have no depth perception. I guess my brain has adapted. I don't find it difficult at all but I do have to be careful in parking lots and during close manuvers, otherwise it is all good.

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  • (Score: 1) by Scruffy Beard 2 on Saturday September 17 2016, @05:00PM

    by Scruffy Beard 2 (6030) on Saturday September 17 2016, @05:00PM (#403179)

    I also drive/bike without my glasses most of the time.

    When needed, such as during left turns across traffic, I move my head a few inches. (I think I have explained this before on this site). One movement gets you distance, 2 get you velocity, and 3+ get you acceleration.

    They delay involved may make me more cautious than average in traffic.

    PS: as I mentioned before, I think the biggest risk is the loss of redundancy. If a bug/rock hits my "good" eye, I can barely see anything: and probably should pull over.

    • (Score: 1) by Scruffy Beard 2 on Saturday September 17 2016, @05:03PM

      by Scruffy Beard 2 (6030) on Saturday September 17 2016, @05:03PM (#403180)

      PPS: I do tend to pull out my glasses when driving a car in the rain. The stereo vision lets me look "though" the rain-drops on the windshield. If I fail to do that, My eyes get tired very quickly from trying to focus alternately between the rain drops and what I actually want to see. (Much like a crappy camera with auto-focus).