OPPO ha ridisegnato i suoi Air Glass, giunti alla seconda generazione. Gli occhiali montano un'inedita lente che supporta la correzione della vista e possono effettuare telefonate e convertire la voce in testo in tempo reale.
Sarà leggero e potente e avrà telecamere esterne per poter gestire applicazioni di realtà mista e con una qualità tale da riuscire a leggere il testo sullo schermo di un telefono.
Secondo un report pubblicato da The Information, il visore VR/AR di Apple potrebbe costare quanto l'HoloLens 2 di Microsoft. Difficile che verrà usato nel salotto di casa.
HTC ha svelato al CES il nuovo visore per Mixed Reality estremamente leggero e compatto. Si può indossare anche come un paio di occhiali e funziona sia come soluzione all in one che come visore da collegare al PC o a smartphone.
Pesa 127 g, ha schermi OLED con risoluzione totale di 5120 x 2560 pixel a 90 Hz, ed è compatibile con SteamVR. Tramite la scansione facciale è possibile ottenere la distanza interpupillare e personalizzare il cuscino adattandolo al volto.
Quest 3 costerà di più del modello attuale ma sarà sarà compatibile con la realtà mista. Poi gli avatar fotorealistici, i Ray-Ban Stories con l’interfaccia neurale e i primi occhiali AR solo nel 2027.
Arriverà in autunno con un form factor più leggero e compatto rispetto a quello di Quest 2. Aumentano risoluzione, potenza del processore e soprattutto arrivano le telecamere a colori per la realtà mista.
Apple fa "all in" sulla realtà aumentata con Vision Pro: interfaccia e app si fondono con la realtà, si controlla tutto con gli occhi, la voce e le dita della mano. Il visore arriverà nel 2024 ad un prezzo stellare.
Abbiamo visto da vicino il nuovo visore Apple Vision Pro. Ci troviamo davanti al primo tassello di un nuovo tipo di computing, che Apple definisce "spatial": dopo 39 anni dal primo Mac cambia radicalmente l'approccio: la realtà diventa il desktop
Experience Virtual Reality in DCS like never before with the Pimax Crystal VR headset. Delivering an incredibly high 5760 x 2880 pixels with a host of performance-enhancing features such as foveated rendering, the Pimax Crystal promises market-leading clarity and convenience for the ‘ultimate’ life-like simulation. The Pimax Crystal is an outstanding choice for DCS providing crisp and clear displays for visually tracking targets whilst providing excellent performance.
Key Features:
Inside-out tracking means there’s no need to buy or manage base stations.
Glass aspheric lenses, QLED panels, and local dimming create vivid colors with realistic contrasts.
2880 x 2880 native resolution (per eye, even at 120Hz), delivers incredible clarity.
Eye tracking means the Crystal is Quad Views capable, allowing it to perform with exceptional GPU efficiency.
Eye-tracking within the Crystal enables the use of Quad Views, a form of Dynamic Foveated Rendering that uses the position of the user's gaze to render in full resolution only the area the user is looking at. Areas outside the user gaze are rendered to a lower resolution, which results in DCS VR performance gains of up to +50% FPS. Watch the video above for a demonstration. Learn more about Quad Views for Pimax here.
Available Now:
Follow this link and use code DCS2024 during checkout to purchase your Pimax Crystal with a $100 USD discount, available until March 15th.
Visit the Pimax area of the DCS forum where Pimax staff are available to answer your questions and support your VR experience.
To hear what the DCS VR community has to say about the Pimax Crystal, please follow the video playlist link here.
Make the most of the incredible offerings that await you in the DCS Lunar Sale 2024. Polychop’s Kiowa is progressing well, and the Pimax Crystal promotion is your gateway to an even more immersive virtual reality experience.
Pimax and Eagle Dynamics senior producer Matt “Wags” Wagner discusses how virtual reality is reshaping flight simulation, what goes into bringing DCS aircraft to life in VR, and their thoughts on the history, current state, and future of VR in DCS. Watch the full interview.
This is a promotional message from Pimax: The Crystal Super micro-OLED takes the original Crystal Super design and upgrades it with dual 4K Sony micro-OLED panels paired with Pimax’s ConcaveView pancake optics.
For a limited time, a purchase of the new Crystal Super Micro-OLED comes with an additional credit of 40,000 ED Miles (worth USD$40 in the DCS e-shop) when you use code DCS40K at checkout.
About the micro-OLED Crystal Super
Each of the 27 million pixels (3840 x 3552 per eye) can be turned off and on individually, meaning ultra crisp visuals, fine contrasts, and zero pixelated edges around objects. If you fly in a night scene, micro-OLED panels have no panel backlight bleeding, meaning black pixels stay truly black with no unwanted glow.
The three-layer ConcaveView lenses deliver the widest field of view of any micro-OLED VR headset, with 116° of horizontal FOV, and offer edge-to-edge clarity. And with eye-tracking, users can use QuadViews Dynamic Foveated Rendering in DCS without any third-party software, getting FPS boosts of up to 50%!
The integrated audio and ergonomic backstrap make the headset comfortable and ideal for long sessions in DCS. With a cabled connection to your PC, there’s visually lossless compression over DisplayPort 1.4a, and thanks to four SLAM tracking cameras, no base stations are required.
To receive 40,000 ED Miles with your purchase of the new Crystal Super micro-OLED, follow this link and use code DCS40K during checkout. Visit the Pimax area of the DCS Forum for dedicated Pimax VR support and suggestions for the best settings.