DC
darkkite
I haven't before. the index isn't great for AR. I've tried using virtual desktop on index.
the resolution is the biggest thing holding it back. next would be heat and weight.
I'm hoping that smaller headsets like above are good enough to to work as a monitor replacement.
i think bigscreen vr has a chance for pcvr users.
i have an index and my only real issue is the resolution and sweet spot isn't good enough for desktop usage or movies. a smaller sharper set that can sit on my desktop in arms reach is much more attractive
watch them start over from square 1 by rehiring all the people they laid off from their xr department
60 is way too low for the scale they have.
this picture also works well. most people are attracted to visuals https://www.reddit.com/r/videos/comments/140vubs/why_is_rvideos_shutting_down_on_june_12th_how/
If i remember, what killed windows phone was the lack of 3rd party apps which is especially ironic since they now own the entire developer experience. They have vscode, github, azure, they could have made windows mobile a compile target and get more apps if they played the long game.
Apple is dipping their toes into XR, I wonder if microsoft will follow them later for another chance of the mobile market
Each subreddit has different moderation requirements, small nuances that change how a Subreddit has to be Moderated.
Good point. I was mostly thinking in moderation in terms of abuse and breaking site-wide rules. One challenge would be if there's a rule against posting spoilers without tags, how would the LLM know if they're spoiling the movie without the script in the training data.
Reddit has only a low percentage of power Mods and they probably don’t involve themselves into this issue. https://www.reddit.com/r/ModCoord/comments/1401qw5/incomplete_and_growing_list_of_participating/
There's over 100 million users in all of these subreddits, this can't be ignored and mainstream news will cover this more
Long-term i believe human moderators for the largest subreddits will be a target for automation while trying to scale this to the entire site.
for me, it's more useful to allow the parent comments to be visible while hiding the child replies
I wonder if a longer term solution would be to auto rotate the server list to bump less popular ones.
they fumbled so hard. they could have had millions of new subscribers if they locked the api key under reddit premium and allowed 3rd party app to enter user api keys
50 a year isn't terrible depending on your use case, but they burned so much good will