Or watching a video of a beheading becomes a whole new experience, as you watch your own head hit the ground.
I find it interesting the author takes the time to differentiate between the Oculus product and Microsoft’s when they’re not related at all...and the Oculus product has far more recognition from its ‘developer’ release and geek word-of-mouth.
I see real innovation being unlocked at MS (finally); Oculus, and their supporters (such as the author) would do well not to anger the giant if they want to hang onto their meager market while their product develops to something marketable (a universal wearable VR device for games to replace monitors/tvs is forthcoming, imho). Telling is their need to ‘acquire’ another company without actually gaining anything except ‘expertise’...
Google Glass has vanished; this transitory period will be interesting to see what emerges as marketable on the other side.
“as you watch your own head hit the ground.”
I’m having a little trouble...wrapping my head around that.