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by laumars
1795 days ago
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All of the AR examples are legitimately AR. It’s a massive field. VR, on the other hand, isn’t such a broad field. Take your 360 videos for example, there’s no interaction with the content. Even 90s era VR was very specifically referring to interactive worlds. Whereas Augmented Reality has always just meant having our real world senses enhanced with digital technology. That means phone apps are legitimate examples. Google Glass is a legitimate example. The barrier for entry is much lower yet the possible utilities for AR are much higher than with VR. Which is why I’m surprised it hasn’t taken off in a much bigger way with all the hype that VR has. |
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So I think we need to define terms - Otherwise if we are comparing overlaying a tape-measure on the camera on your mobile phone to being able to plug on a headset and playing beat-saber, it's not a particularly useful comparison and I'm not surprised that VR has bigger hype!
(But moving about a bit of furniture through the camera view on your mobile phone is very different to something like magic leap, or oculus passthrough).