Your reading comprehension is a bit off - I didn’t write that I only read the title, I wrote that I commented on the title.
The rest of your rant is up to you.
Your reading comprehension is a bit off - I didn’t write that I only read the title, I wrote that I commented on the title.
The rest of your rant is up to you.
Don’t be scared. Just don’t fall for posts which try to get the impossible. It’s not that difficult.
I commented on the title of your post - nobody with some knowledge in that field (as you claim to have) would phrase that question that way.
Be offended, I can’t change that - but pointing out the obvious may help others to not make the mistake of hoping that there’s cheap good.
There isn’t.
You mean “cheap or reliable”. And even with the better brands it’s always the question not if but when a device will fail.
Why would I “see” anyone remote as an avatar over prohibitively expensive gear when a cheap webcam delivers the original picture with all the cues and information we get from conversations face to face? (And without motion sickness as a bonus.)
This vr crap only makes sense for people who don’t want to interact or who can’t interact like normal human beings. Or who aren’t human beings like that insectoid that inhabits Zuckerbergs skin.
Does it still exist? Never heard anything about it after the initial marketing budget was burned through.
It’s shallow marketing blabla? - Always has been.
Let me guess: The CEO and the other high figures in that company made bank with VC money and are now moving on with their hoards?
Besides that tragic accident (fuck alcohol) and with all due respect: That guy has his priorities completely messed up.
The moment he got trampled on for asking for support he should have dropped that project. Into a deep, deep pit. Probably would have been hired in an instant for a lot of cash to continue to maintain it under the direction of one of the FAANGs.
Oh, the horrors of open source… So many souls lost, so many lifes deteriorated.
That’s in fact the point I was making, in this case about SSDs. Low prices don’t help with reliability as producers use the worse part of a production run for the cheaper brands (friend of mine works for a European based manufacturer of silicon chips, and he can tell stories about the finicky processes around that tiny stuff and how they try to make the most of it).