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Varjo Expands Enterprise Headset Lineup With VR-2 & VR-2 Pro

Peter Graham

The Bionic Display still features two 1920×1080 low persistence micro-OLEDs and two 1440×1600 low persistence AMOLEDs allowing for the high definition the headset is known for. Additionally, the Varjo VR-2 Pro also comes with integrated Ultraleap (formerly Leap Motion) hand tracking technology.

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The High-end VR Room of the Future Looks Like This

UploadVR Between Realities podcast

Future solutions will get rid of clunky wired headsets and move onto glasses that can project a high-definition image onto the eye, a la Magic Leap, and eventually contact lenses that contain tiny screens. 3D tracking, capture, and/or rendering: Paracosm: 8i: PrioVR: Uncorporeal: Otoy: Matterport: Snapchat: www.snapchat.com.

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All you need to know on HoloLens 2

The Ghost Howls

This is a great image definition: consider that for instance the Vive Pro has only 16 PPD. This new HoloLens has for sure made a huge leap forward for what concerns comfort. The new HoloLens uses its integrated eye tracking to perform user authentication via iris recognition. Eye tracking.

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The XR Week Peek (2023.06.04): Apple to launch its headset, Meta unveils Quest 3 and many games, and more!

The Ghost Howls

It should run on top of an M2 chipset, which is much more powerful than the processing unit of the Quest 2, 4K displays per eye with strong HDR (a rumor talks about a 5000-nits display, about which many are lost in the optical path), a quite nice FOV. The Quest 3 is similar to what Brad Lynch already leaked months ago.

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On the XR Beat, with VentureBeat’s Dean Takahashi

XR for Business Podcast

Dean: Getting back to the platform owners, I think if you look at HTC and some of the things that they’ve done… you know, they did an eye-tracking version of the HTC Vive here. Alan: The VIVE Pro Eye. Dean: Yes, I definitely think that’s going to happen. Dean: Yeah. Let’s look out five years.

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On the XR Beat, with VentureBeat’s Dean Takahashi

XR for Business Podcast

Dean: Getting back to the platform owners, I think if you look at HTC and some of the things that they’ve done… you know, they did an eye-tracking version of the HTC Vive here. Alan: The VIVE Pro Eye. Dean: Yes, I definitely think that’s going to happen. Dean: Yeah. Let’s look out five years.

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On the XR Beat, with VentureBeat's Dean Takahashi

XR for Business Podcast

you know, they did an eye-tracking version of the HTC Vive here. Alan: The VIVE Pro Eye. Dean: Yes, I definitely think that's going to happen. And then Ultrahaptics and Leap Motion coming together, creating that virtual hand tracking meets virtual manipulation of the air: ultrasonics. Dean: Yeah.