Spacetop AR laptop / glasses (www.sightful.com)
from HootinNHollerin@lemmy.world to technology@lemmy.world on 09 Jun 14:00
https://lemmy.world/post/16349693

Wired AR glasses / laptop geared for work. Seems like a cheaper, lighter alternative to apple’s Vision Pro. Looked it up after seeing a cybersecurity guy use it in that crazy documentary on the Ashley Madison hack and a few people post about it on LinkedIn

#technology

threaded - newest

just_another_person@lemmy.world on 09 Jun 14:13 next collapse

This is either a joke, or vaporware. Ironically, all of this is already possible without buying an untrusted hardware platform with unknown software.

helenslunch@feddit.nl on 09 Jun 15:08 next collapse

Or you can buy the XReal Air and plug it into any existing PC?

HootinNHollerin@lemmy.world on 09 Jun 16:24 collapse

Hadn’t heard of those www.xreal.com

nickwitha_k@lemmy.sdf.org on 09 Jun 16:57 next collapse

Apparently, Viture has been much more FOSS friendly. Xreal really wants people in their ecosystem and have as of yet refused to provide documentation or open API, though there’s been a good deal of success with reverse engineering.

Bernie_Sandals@lemmy.world on 09 Jun 21:57 collapse

Can vouch for Viture being much more open source friendly, there’s a redditor making a plugin for the steamdeck to make it work far better with the Viture’s, and Viture has apparently given them access to some things that Xreal has refused.

Their openness is what won me over for them over other AR glasses. Not only are the willing to help what’s effectively a competing software developer, it’s also incredibly helpful when the product is so niche, don’t have to worry about a company going out of business and your device suddenly becoming a paper weight.

nickwitha_k@lemmy.sdf.org on 11 Jun 12:06 collapse

I have a first gen pair of Airs that I absolutely love, except for the lack of open-ness. I think that I’ll have to try dumping the firmware and writing my own at some point - likely when I have to replace the frames (have had to CA glue and tape the right arm three times now; I’m rough on my electronics). The teardowns that I’ve seen show that they contain almost entirely common off-the-shelf components (MCU, IMU, I/O expander, etc), so, shouldn’t be too bad to implement via Arduino or Rust.

The thing that drives me most crazy though is the lack of forethought on the Beam. It does it’s job great but they didn’t bother to have a dedicated power-in or support high enough wattage to run it off of external power. It’s absolutely maddening to have to recharge it 3/4 of the way through work. Think I’ll be modifying it to add a USB-PD input for power.

huginn@feddit.it on 09 Jun 18:12 collapse

I’ve used them and they’re great

tophneal@sh.itjust.works on 09 Jun 16:12 next collapse

I looked these up too after seeing them mentioned in an interview. Definitely vaporware. Reviews are not good. It’s very limited in its capabilities vs an actual laptop, build quality is meh at best, and the glasses are not very accommodating to the wearer.

Neat premise, not there yet.

tea@lemmy.today on 10 Jun 00:27 next collapse

Looks a lot like Immersed’s Visor glasses. Not sure which one is more likely to actually be released and actually meet expectations.

dukk@programming.dev on 10 Jun 11:17 collapse

SpaceOS is built for the modern Web, so anything you do on the Web, you can now do - in space.

AKA it’s a glorified Chromebook in terms of functionality. Not there yet…