Домой United States USA — software How these $400 XR glasses cured my Apple Vision Pro FOMO

How these $400 XR glasses cured my Apple Vision Pro FOMO

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Viture’s One XR glasses are a clever and portable way to work and play, and they somehow support Vision Pro’s killer feature.
As I make my way to the back of the commuter bus, I pull out what looks like an ordinary pair of sunglasses (with only slightly thicker frames), connect its MagSafe-like power adapter to my MacBook, sit, and start to click, drag, scroll, and type. 
From a bystander’s view, I look like the mightiest of keyboard warriors, churning out bodies of text without ever needing to look down at the QWERTY layout on my laptop. From my view, I’m staring at a 120-inch display projected two feet in front of me thanks to a meticulous arrangement of light and mirrors within the Viture One’s XR Glasses.
ZDNET RECOMMENDS Viture One XR Glasses
These extended-reality glasses can display a 120-inch projection of the software they’re tethered to.
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These extended-reality glasses can display a 120-inch projection of the software they’re tethered to.
Viture is pitching its glasses to people who want to game, watch movies, or surf the web without needing to be physically in front of a TV or office desk. The glasses’ 120-inch projection is more suited for folks who would rather binge-watch shows while lying in bed or are on a flight and seek privacy when using a phone, tablet, or laptop. But the overlap in use cases is uncanny and not unintentional.
My use case slots right in between: I want a larger platform to draft news and reviews and answer secretive emails as I sit in the make-believe comfort of public transit. The glasses are also practical for when your partner wants to watch The Bachelor on the living room TV, but you’re more interested in the marriage of basketball and the spirit of competition.

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