TECH SPECIAL The FacepuTers are coming!
Virtual reality devices are now closer to reality and they’ve got their eyes on you.. As you strap on an Oculus Rift, the screen in front of your eyes shifts as you turn your face
OF
LATE, the phrase “The Next Big Thing” has started sounding like
one of those terrible jokes your back-slapping uncle likes to crack.
It’s old, it’s been repeated too many times and frankly, wasn’t
even funny the first time around. The pipe that brings in really
jawdropping new technology seems to have run dry. Until the Oculus
rifted in!
THE
OCULUS IS BORN
Virtual
Reality (VR) devices, VR Headgear and all other kind of helmets that
you strap onto your face have always been very exciting at
announcement stage and truly terrible to use when finally out in the
market. The level of technology at that time was really clunky, the
screens were blocky and pixelated, the user interface was
appallingly bad and the experience was far from immersive. Thus VR
Headgear died its own natural death and not many mourned that loss.
One company did and brought it back with a bang. Oculus Rift was
born off a Kickstarter (a funding platform) campaign and thus
already had the backing of those that would actually use it.
The
technology was brilliant and the execution flawless. A low-latency
full-HD screen on a device that was light and fitted well, a screen
that looked like a cinemascope movie hall right in front of your
eyes, and software and content that was perfectly tuned to its
capabilities. But it was the human interface that made everyone
giddy with excitement.
As
you strapped on an Oculus Rift, the screen in front of your eyes
shifted as you turned your face. It didn’t matter where you
looked, the screen would naturally align and show you a lot more
than a flat 2D fixed screen – thus giving you the exact experience
you got when you looked right or left, up or down or even behind in
real life. In a game you could look up and see a missile coming from
the sky and immediately turn to your left, see a building and jump
in.
In
a movie, you could be right in the middle of a spaghetti Western
shootout and check the position of the sun and then look down at
your gun before letting off the fatal shot. In a sports telecast,
you could be in the middle of the field and run with the players
while looking up into the stadium. It was fascinating and magical.
The
Next Big Thing was finally here.
THE
ZUCKY EFFECT
Then
Facebook went and bought Oculus Rift. To many, it was the death
knell as Facebook would do its famous ‘Zucky’ twist to a good
product and make it into one more way getting more personal data out
of you. Here’s where I differ from most analysts. I think Facebook
buying Oculus is a good thing. On its own, Oculus would have been a
niche gaming product and thus wouldn’t have had the financial or
marketing muscle to become a mainstream product used in daily life.
Facebook and the Zuck have shown enough street smarts with their
purchase of Instagram and WhatsApp and have let them run as
independent products.
Thus
Oculus could well be doing that and becoming the de facto standard
for lifelike video conferencing, a tourism alternative, a virtual
reality tour device for things that need to be experienced first
hand (a walk through a museum, a factory visit, browsing through a
mall) and more. And while we wait for Facebook to take Oculus to
that level – more fun stuff that wants to be attached to your face
is being released. You can try them out right now to have your socks
blown out of the water – and they don’t cost an arm or a leg,
they just need small parts of your face!
GOOGLE
CARDBOARD
While
Facebook was working on acquiring Oculus for billions, Google was
doing a DIY for pennies. And thus was born the Google Cardboard or
as it’s more popularly known as – the Oculus Thrift! A piece of
cardboard, some lenses, a magnet button, NFC tag and your smartphone
– and boom, you’ve got a VR headset all set to wow your eyes and
mind. It works surprisingly well, has its own app and costs nothing.
That’s because Google doesn’t actually sell these but gives them
away at a few conferences. But ‘make-it-yourself ’ Google
Cardboard instructions are all over plus Cardboardlike kits are
available in many places for as low as $9.99.
BOXIGHT
KIT AND PRO
An
Indian company figured that a DIY cardboard kit should not be more
than about 500. And thus that’s what the Boxight Cardboard costs.
Order a DIY kit and assemble it in minutes, slip in your phone and
you are set! It’s built even better than Google Cardboard. If you
don’t like DIYs, then buy the Pro version. This is a good-looking
virtual headgear that is lightweight and well-built and comes with
better lenses that can do 3D too. Once again all you need is your
smartphone. This one costs about 2,599.
Check
eBay or Amazon or Snapdeal and you’ll see many other options and
cardboard kits plus new apps, games and virtual tours are popping up
in thousands every day. You owe it to yourself to experience what a
faceputer can do to your mind. Strap one on and get lost!
Rajiv
Makhni is managing editor, Technology, NDTV, and the anchor of
Gadget Guru, Cell Guru and Newsnet 3
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