Friday 22 December 2017

Magic Leap’s futuristic headset has the same limitation as Microsoft’s HoloLens

Magic Leap OneMagic Leap

  • Magic Leap is a secretive Florida-based startup which raised $1.9 billion to make a set of augmented-reality smartglasses.
  • The eyeglasses were finally published on Wednesday afternoon — a huge show six years and $1.9 billion in the making.
  • Rolling Stone was able to try out the headset, and explains it as something which sounds quite like Microsoft’s HoloLens.

The next step after smartphones is almost certainly some form of “AR”: Augmented Reality. At least that is what investors believe, to this point at which they have pumped just shy of $2 billion to Florida-based AR headset founder Magic Leap.

For many years, Magic Leap has increased astronomical rounds of financing in the likes of Google and Alibaba, Fidelity and JP Morgan. And on Wednesday morning, after years of fundraising and rumors, Magic Leap introduced its first product: Magic Leap One. It is the entire set up you visit above, for example, headset, control, and corresponding computer (the round thing on the left).

The notion is straightforward: It’s a wearable computer.  

Magic Leap One (Lightwear headset)The Magic Leap One headset, also called “Lightwear,” premiered on Wednesday, December 20. The final product might appear different than this. Magic Leap

Searching through Magic Leap One’s Lightwear eyeglasses, you can manage your email or appear YouTube videos or some other stuff you would normally do on a smartphone or computer. Rather than looking down in a display, it is projected in to the field of view.  

You know the film “Minority Report”? It is kind of outdated at this time, but if you’ve seen it you might recall Tom Cruise using a computer that is essentially projected to the world facing him.  

minority report tom cruise“Minority Report” came out in 2002, when Tom Cruise was only 40 years old. Twentieth Century Fox / Dreamworks SKG

Magic Leap’s headset is comparable, and it goes where you go.  

But there is a enormous difference between the things Magic Leap guarantees and what it is actually supplying. This line in the very first hands-on using the headset, maintenance of Rolling Stone’s Brian Crecente, says everything. “Magic Leap’s Lightwear does not offer you a field of view that matches your eyes.”

Simply put: Magic Leap’s headset provides a viewing window to an “augmented” reality, rather than completely siphoned users because fact.

If you look to your left without turning your head, you will observe the side of the headset on your peripheral view. This also leads to users searching at the planet through a window, that feels as as normal as it sounds. I can attest — it is precisely the way that Microsoft’s similarly futuristic AR headset, HoloLens, functions. Crecente really makes that contrast himself at Rolling Stone.  

“The viewing space is all about the size of a VHS tape held facing you along with your arms extended. It is much larger than the HoloLens, however it is still there,” he composes.

Microsoft HoloLens / Magic Leap One (Lightwear)Left: Microsoft HoloLens | Right: Magic Leap One (Lightwear)Microsoft / Magic Leap

Really, it is the biggest limitation with Microsoft’s HoloLens. You only see whatever is directly in the center of the vision when wearing the headset, which ends up feeling like a tease of something amazing.

When I last wore the HoloLens, it told me the way to drift by painting arrows onto the floor in front of my eyes. The proof of theory there is obvious — imagine wearing a simple pair of eyeglasses that offered Google Maps in your vision. Amazing!

But the limitation is also obvious. Reality is simply augmented insofar as you’re looking inside a comparatively limited space facing you.  

According to the Rolling Stone piece, future versions of Magic Leap’s cans “significantly expands the field of view.” If future comes, augmented-reality merchandise will perform a much better job of providing what they promise — but for now, they are very impressive computer eyeglasses.

Source

http://www.businessinsider.com/magic-leap-one-headset-has-same-problem-as-microsoft-hololens-2017-12

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