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Daily Authority: š„½ Meta's VR prototypes
ā Good morning! Keep scrolling for more about coffee!
Zuck has VR prototypes
Meta has a bunch of new VR prototypes shown off in a video courtesy of Mark Zuckerberg himself.
What it all means, whatās coming, and why.
Brief details:
- In short, Zuck shows off what engineers are working on in the lab, with designs codenamed Butterscotch, Starburst, and Mirror Lake.
- Each looks like a University project: strips of chips, PCBs, fans, cabling, and so on.
- But thatās all because itās about road-testing the hardware, which Zuck details, explaining the processes to make small, light, bright headsets with fine detail and better focusing.
More details:
- Metaās Chief Scientist Michael Abrash said in a video briefing alongside the Meta CEO that he wants VR headsets at a level where people canāt tell āwhether what theyāre looking at is real or virtual,ā as a kind of āVisual Turing Test.ā
- So, just to focus on two prototypes shown off, first the Butterscotch prototype focuses on āretinal resolution.ā
- Zuck points out that the sort of general threshold for the eye is agreed at around 60 pixels per degree. The Quest 2, for example, is about 20 pixels per degree. No consumer VR headset yet comes close, though some enterprise-grade ones do, with limitations. Butterscotch achieves 55 pixels per degree.
- One other prototype is Starburst, which is aiming for ultra-bright HDR. Zuckerberg says ānature is often 10 or 100 times brighter than modern HD TVs and monitors,ā and colors need to be that bright to be realistic.
- Again back to the Quest 2: it reaches 100 nits.
- The detail of Starburst is that it reaches 20,000 nits and is āone of the brightest HDR displays yet built.ā
- That kind of brightness requires truly a lot of energy. Starburst is accordingly a tethered prototype, and not practical without changes to tech, and Meta is working on more like a 10,000 nits objective.
- But Zuckerberg said in an interview with Adam Savageās Tested YouTube channel that theyād implement different ideas to get there. That channel got to have a deeper dive into some of this, too, though itās an hour-long so I couldnāt get through it all before deadline.
But why?
- The real question is: why?
- Why would Meta show these off; why is Mark Zuckerberg showing them off?
- Well, highly-coordinated and managed PR always has the objective of showing leadership and brand-building and securing an image.
- That goes internally too: the many, many thousands of Meta employees not working on VR in the company might be wondering why so much investment is going away from what Facebook does well (ads), and into VR, AR, XR and so on, and the Metaverse.
- And the competition is coming: Apple is very much expected to release some kind of headset within the next year or two, and Microsoft has been working at the HoloLens project for some time now, with devices in the real world but targeted at businesses.
- So, thereās some hint that Meta expects others to release something, and itās getting ahead of the game.
Roundup
š¤ Samsungās latest Galaxy Z Fold 3 deal brings down its price to just $599, perfect if you want a foldable and donāt need the Fold 4 (Android Authority).
šØ Samsung Pay no longer works on non-Samsung phones, which is just silly (Android Authority).
š Google Reminders could be sunsetted soon (Android Authority).
š Former Apple engineer details why the first iPhone didnāt have copy and paste: no time! (9to5Mac).
š Google says itās time for longtime small-business users to pay up (NY Times, gift link).
ā A Cloudflare outage broke large swathes of the internet: Discord, Shopify, Grindr, Fitbit all had outages for a while early this morning (The Verge).
š® Oops: Developer admits thereās no way to complete KOTOR II on Switch. It bugs out at about halfway through the game (Kotaku).
š” New Philips Hue smart lights include its first portable rechargeable smart lamp: coming in September (Engadget).
š„ Huh: Spray-on plant-based coating could replace wasteful plastic food wrap, and extend food life (Engadget).
š¦ Picassoās favorite pigment may one day recycle metals from your cell phone: Prussian Blue can extract gold and platinum-group metals from e-waste (Ars Technica).
š§ The ghost of Internet Explorer will haunt the web for years (Wired).
š āWhat is your most controversial take on Star Wars?ā (r/askreddit). (Yes!)
Chart Tuesday
Itās my last week soā¦ two charts, why not!
First is a chart race of coffee production over the last 20 years, which is mostly shockingly Brazilian, and secondly, hasnāt changed much ā and Vietnam mostly grows robusta, not arabica. Click here to watch from 2001-2021.
And second, here are the worldās top dog, cat, fish, and bird pet owners:
Cheers,
Tristan Rayner, Senior Editor.