I think VR hardware today is the equivalent of the suitcase type laptops from the seventies or the huge brick phones from the eighties. Until they can integrate the hardware into a lower cost wearable similar to sunglasses I can’t see much widespread adoption outside of some very specific use cases. However once the hardware is scaled down from a size and price point, you will see large adoption of it, ironically the price and size will then increase as consumers will want faster processing, larger displays, longer battery life etc.
tangers69 t1_jc0xfnk wrote
Reply to Tim Cook bets on Apple’s mixed-reality headset to secure his legacy by DarthBuzzard
I think VR hardware today is the equivalent of the suitcase type laptops from the seventies or the huge brick phones from the eighties. Until they can integrate the hardware into a lower cost wearable similar to sunglasses I can’t see much widespread adoption outside of some very specific use cases. However once the hardware is scaled down from a size and price point, you will see large adoption of it, ironically the price and size will then increase as consumers will want faster processing, larger displays, longer battery life etc.