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Bringing the Links to your Living Room with AR Golf, featuring Deloitte’s Allan Cook & Kaitlyn Kuczer

XR for Business Podcast

Kaitlyn: We are coming in from Denver, Colorado. Kaitlyn: [chuckles] Alan: So I want to talk about something that keeps coming up in conversations, and one of the things that we've identified at MetaVRse is that the wearables VS 2D screen. There are far less wearables. Thinking about like the Google Cardboard, couple of dollars.

AR 78
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Bringing the Links to your Living Room with AR Golf, featuring Deloitte’s Allan Cook & Kaitlyn Kuczer

XR for Business Podcast

Kaitlyn: We are coming in from Denver, Colorado. Alan: So I want to talk about something that keeps coming up in conversations, and one of the things that we've identified at MetaVRse is that the wearables VS 2D screen. There are far less wearables. Thinking about like the Google Cardboard, couple of dollars.

AR 78
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article thumbnail

Bringing the Links to your Living Room with AR Golf, featuring Deloitte’s Allan Cook & Kaitlyn Kuczer

XR for Business Podcast

Kaitlyn: We are coming in from Denver, Colorado. Alan: So I want to talk about something that keeps coming up in conversations, and one of the things that we've identified at MetaVRse is that the wearables VS 2D screen. There are far less wearables. Thinking about like the Google Cardboard, couple of dollars.

AR 78
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Can Vuze Become the Next GoPro?

VRWorld

Numerous companies rode the coattails of small Silicon Valley startup that got swallowed up by Google. One such competitor is HumanEyes Technologies, a American company from Denver, Colorado – developers behind VUZE, a turn-key platform for stereoscopic 360 degree video with a combination of hardware (camera, VR glasses and studio software).