• conciselyverbose@sh.itjust.works
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    9 months ago

    The coolest piece of tech I’ve ever experienced by a large margin. The potential is endless.

    But the people actually wearing it in public are crazy.

    • Lydia_K@startrek.website
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      9 months ago

      What would you use it for? Honest question.

      I can’t see using it for work. Writing a long email with an onscreen keyboard is not realistic.

      It doesn’t really play games.

      So it’s for watching YouTube on your face? I have a TV and couch that do that, and a phone in my pocket 24/7 that will do that. I honestly can’t figure out the use case.

      • conciselyverbose@sh.itjust.works
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        9 months ago

        Today? Building stuff. The app ecosystem isn’t there for casual audiences yet, because devs need their hands on it to do most stuff that utilizes what it can do. You can’t build much more than the basics using a phone to test.

        You don’t have to use an on screen keyboard. It supports Bluetooth mouse and keyboard perfectly fine. The bigger restriction is the number of windows to me, but there are ways to make that work.

        Interacting with and laying out information in 3D space is just different from doing it on a 2D display. Our brain understands 3D space intuitively in a pretty deep way. There would be some level of “OK, I turned my MacBook display in bed into a 500 foot screen next to a waterfall”, and stuff like the demo 3D videos of animals were super immersive. I did feel like I could reach out and touch them.

        But I want to build out the books in my personal collection into a 3D library with shelves to browse. I want to see stuff I’m modeling in actual 3D instead of one 2D angle at a time I have to manipulate to get different perspectives on. I want to plan out a room layout by standing in the middle of the room and virtually dragging things around. I’m just spitballing a couple of the first things that come to mind, but AR Kit is powerful and capable of all of that with relative ease. I can think of countless other “small” things that change the experience compared to doing stuff on a monitor pretty significantly. I don’t think it’s that different to people saying “you can do whatever on a computer” when iPhones or iPads came out. Sure, but as it gets into more hands and more people are able to build apps for it, people will come up with all kinds of uses that fundamentally feel different even if the same core thing can be done on existing hardware.