The first consumer-ready Oculus Rift virtual-reality (VR) headset was delivered to a real customer over the weekend, and reviewers got their first taste. The initial feedback: It is a beautiful, wonderful device that immerses you, yet it still has a ways to go.
Oculus VR Inc founder Palmer Luckey hand-delivered the first Rift to software developer Ross Martin in Anchorage, Alaska, on Saturday, launching a new era in virtual reality by putting the most powerful VR device yet into a consumer’s hands.
Martin, who had never tried VR before, spent a few hours on the Rift on Monday morning. He watched a short movie, played a game and explored a virtual environment that included an up-close encounter with a Tyrannosaurus rex.
Photo: AP
“I couldn’t stop saying: ‘Wow,”’ Martin, a 33-year-old Web developer, said in an interview.
However, he said that he felt a touch of nausea at times and that the resolution could be better.
“If you’re a gamer, this is right up your alley,” he said. “You’re going to be able to forgive that.”
Oculus has said it is sending the Rift to its first Kickstarter backers first, followed by those who ordered one in January for US$600, or at least US$1,500 with a high-end personal computer included.
Oculus, which began crowd-funding through Kickstarter in August 2012, was acquired by Facebook Inc for US$2 billion in 2014 and has shipped two developer versions so far.
Expectations for a consumer version have been high. There is a backlog of orders and if you order now, you can expect delivery in July. It is not clear, though, how many units Oculus made for the first round — and whether there will ultimately be much demand beyond gamers and hard-core technologists.
Early reviews by journalists have been mixed.
Steven Tweedie of Business Insider was glowingly positive in his review of the Rift, relishing the greater presence he felt in both games and narrative stories.
“Everything feels like it means more: there’s a heightened connection to characters, both in games and short films, and the action carries weight,” he wrote.
However, he said its hefty price tag “is undoubtedly the biggest thing keeping more people from getting the chance to try virtual reality.”
Time’s Lisa Eadicicco called the Rift “expensive, complicated, and totally wonderful.”
“It’s brilliant. It’s fascinating. It’s not perfect, but it’s only getting started,” she added.
Several reviewers, including IGN’s Dan Stapleton, wrote that because the Rift does not come with controllers that allow for separate actions by each hand, the Rift will suffer compared with the HTC Corp’s (宏達電) Vive, which will have such controllers included when it comes out next month. Oculus expects its “Touch” controllers to come out later this year.
Wired reviewer Peter Rubin similarly bemoaned the lack of games using Touch.
Nathan Olivarez-Giles of the Wall Street Journal was not wowed by all the 30 games that were available at launch.
And he wrote that nausea, a consistent complaint among VR headset users, was real.
“When I pushed myself to play Valkyrie for as long as 45 minutes nonstop, I took aspirin to fight off a headache,” he wrote.
With an approval rating of just two percent, Peruvian President Dina Boluarte might be the world’s most unpopular leader, according to pollsters. Protests greeted her rise to power 29 months ago, and have marked her entire term — joined by assorted scandals, investigations, controversies and a surge in gang violence. The 63-year-old is the target of a dozen probes, including for her alleged failure to declare gifts of luxury jewels and watches, a scandal inevitably dubbed “Rolexgate.” She is also under the microscope for a two-week undeclared absence for nose surgery — which she insists was medical, not cosmetic — and is
CAUTIOUS RECOVERY: While the manufacturing sector returned to growth amid the US-China trade truce, firms remain wary as uncertainty clouds the outlook, the CIER said The local manufacturing sector returned to expansion last month, as the official purchasing managers’ index (PMI) rose 2.1 points to 51.0, driven by a temporary easing in US-China trade tensions, the Chung-Hua Institution for Economic Research (CIER, 中華經濟研究院) said yesterday. The PMI gauges the health of the manufacturing industry, with readings above 50 indicating expansion and those below 50 signaling contraction. “Firms are not as pessimistic as they were in April, but they remain far from optimistic,” CIER president Lien Hsien-ming (連賢明) said at a news conference. The full impact of US tariff decisions is unlikely to become clear until later this month
GROWING CONCERN: Some senior Trump administration officials opposed the UAE expansion over fears that another TSMC project could jeopardize its US investment Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co (TSMC, 台積電) is evaluating building an advanced production facility in the United Arab Emirates (UAE) and has discussed the possibility with officials in US President Donald Trump’s administration, people familiar with the matter said, in a potentially major bet on the Middle East that would only come to fruition with Washington’s approval. The company has had multiple meetings in the past few months with US Special Envoy to the Middle East Steve Witkoff and officials from MGX, an influential investment vehicle overseen by the UAE president’s brother, the people said. The conversations are a continuation of talks that
CHIP DUTIES: TSMC said it voiced its concerns to Washington about tariffs, telling the US commerce department that it wants ‘fair treatment’ to protect its competitiveness Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co (TSMC, 台積電) yesterday reiterated robust business prospects for this year as strong artificial intelligence (AI) chip demand from Nvidia Corp and other customers would absorb the impacts of US tariffs. “The impact of tariffs would be indirect, as the custom tax is the importers’ responsibility, not the exporters,” TSMC chairman and chief executive officer C.C. Wei (魏哲家) said at the chipmaker’s annual shareholders’ meeting in Hsinchu City. TSMC’s business could be affected if people become reluctant to buy electronics due to inflated prices, Wei said. In addition, the chipmaker has voiced its concern to the US Department of Commerce