Doc Holliday
SPOILER: Columbus finds America
Guys guys!! You can have Virtual sex with Facebook chicks!!!!
Think big!! Remember zuckenberg is a nerd to the core lol
Think big!! Remember zuckenberg is a nerd to the core lol
From Palmer's answers on Reddit:
http://www.reddit.com/r/oculus/comments/21cy9n/the_future_of_vr/cgc07mj?context=3
Can't tell if:
1) He's being misled.
2) He's misleading us.
3) Really..?
I really would love to hear Carmack's thoughts on this.
It was but do you think facebook is seriously going to put out a high end tech VR?
From Palmer's answers on Reddit:
http://www.reddit.com/r/oculus/comments/21cy9n/the_future_of_vr/cgc07mj?context=3
Can't tell if:
1) He's being misled.
2) He's misleading us.
3) Really..?
I'm super late on this and don't really have time to read a 75+ thread.
But
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At that 2 billion.
Holy shit at this news... I'm not sure what to think about it.
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Carmack: "I can't hear you over the sound of all this flapping money"
Ding Ding Ding.
Sony is looking to get absolutely buried, if they don't launch to an audience of equal size, and jump in front of this VR movement. Facebook will help with better production chains and possess a marketing arm unlike anything ever seen before. Sony needs to release on PC if they don't want Morpheus to be "that weird piece of Playstation proprietary equipment"
It was but do you think facebook is seriously going to put out a high end tech VR?
FB is going for something more mainstream then high end PC games.
While the folks at Oculus are more than an adversary for the combined research of Sony and NASA, Sony probably did not consider Oculus to be able to match their marketing and production. Sony probably thought they could enter the Playstation ecosystem at a lower price point than the CV1, with a much bigger marketing push to the casual crowd. They probably thought they could slowly roll out PC support, once Morpheus pushed PS4 sales out the ass.
Now. They no longer have this luxury. Overnight, they've lost their marketing and financial advantage. They really need to launch on PC if they don't want to be left with scraps.
I'm super late on this and don't really have time to read a 75+ thread.
But
![]()
At that 2 billion.
Well sure, I think it would be better if it did what I want it to do.
So in my eyes it's a flaw that it doesn't do it.
Carmack dont need the money. All he cares about is a new challenge in programming. He's already rich.
Holy shit at this news... I'm not sure what to think about it.
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Carmack: "I can't hear you over the sound of all this flapping money"
Not anymore. 99% of Facebook users are on some crappy pc, laptop, or tablet. You can bet OR is going to aim at an even lower denominator than ps4 now.
Doesn't this show a huge flaw in funding Kickstarter?
They just took around 2.5 million in pledged money from 10,000 people and turned it into 2 billion.
These people who pledged money will see nothing out of this, they just sold the company.
They can take the money and run, and the people who initially funded this will have nothing to actually get their money back.
There needs to be a kickstarter like system where the people who invest actually have a share in the company, that way the people who actually back the product have to live up to their claims and can't just sell out, while rewarding early investors if something like this happens.
I mean really, where else in the world can you make a product with such low risk, high reward initial investment?
VR will be such a small market at first that it won't be a big deal.
That's the thing you guys need to understand, and why Facebook isn't going to fuck up Oculus' roadmap. They need to establish Oculus as a viable technology first. And to do that, they need to become successful in the gaming market. That market isn't that big, in Facebook's view, it's mainly next-gen consoles and high end PCs.
But for Oculus to establish themselves and VR as a means of interaction, they need to get that hardcore market first. So Facebook isn't going to push their services on you, because they know you don't want that shit. They know you'll go to someone else if they do.
But they're playing the long game. A decade from now when most machines will be capable of doing VR with ease, then the market is a lot larger. Suddenly there's a market for the bullshit that Facebook wants to sell. And what better way to make sure that people use their software and services then to make the hardware as well. Apple will tell you that.
So them coming out and saying that they're still committed to gaming and aren't going to force you into Facebook's services, and Zuckerberg saying they see Oculus as the next communications platform are not mutually exclusive. They can do both, but for Facebook to capture the market they really want, the reason they payed $2 billion for Oculus, they have to nail the gaming part first. Because if they don't and they scare everyone off, then they threw that money out the window.
Carmack dont need the money. All he cares about is a new challenge in programming. He's already rich.
Holy shit at this news... I'm not sure what to think about it.
![]()
Carmack: "I can't hear you over the sound of all this flapping money"
Hahaha, that actually makes sense. I was probably a bit harsh, so please accept my apologies.And sorry, I'm a writer, so repetition is annoying to me, especially when the guy is informal and doesn't care himself.
Occulus never had an issue with funding. Being able to custom-order their own hardware is great, and is a terrific benefit, absolutely. But Facebook is not a hardware company, so they're going to have to strike deals to get those components made. Now, you're automatically expecting mainstream adoption - I don't think we're going to see it adopted in numbers large enough for the kind of discounts you seem to be expecting. This isn't going to be cheap enough for impulse purchasing.So you're saying more money isn't needed for Oculus to get where they want? Of course none of that is possible right now, but having an actual player in the industry makes it possible for them to be taken seriously by more than a NeoGaf member. They can create their own lenses now, which they couldn't before. Now they can actually beat Sony hands down, but that's a bad thing? Ads will always be a part of the net. Even the early days had bots going from chatroom to chatroom advertising things.
You seem to be presenting conflicting ideas here. Gamers need to adopt VR so that VR doesn't need gamers. If this is the case, why would gamers adopt VR?Stop thinking so small, VR is for more than just games, and in the end, the games won't even be a check on the box because it'll be a given, Zuckers is interested in the future. But for the future to happen, the Rift has to be the best possible experience and gamers do have to embrace it first, as they are the only ones who will tech a chance so early.
I wholeheartedly disagree. VR is potential goldmine. There are tons of applications ranging from science to millitary to entertainment. Gaming, in comparison, is such a miniscule market compared to the potential that VR devices like "Morpheus" can reach out to. The money to be made in Virtual Reality, for the most part isn't in gaming and I hope that Sony realizes that. Limiting themselves to only PS4 is shooting themselves in the foot.
The idea of virtual vacations, or virtual meetups with family members has immeasurable possibilities and that's where I believe the money will be made. If Facebook (or Sony) release the right applications for VR it will be a huge product in its first years in the market.
Sony does make medical products, so it is entirely possible that they do find application for VR in the medical sciences. VR will be big.
Oculus now has far deeper pockets to draw from (limited by Facebook willingness in the same way Xbox and MS can't be equivocated in terms of resources), but they don't gain any production competencies via this acquisition.While the folks at Oculus are more than an adversary for the combined research of Sony and NASA, Sony probably did not consider Oculus to be able to match their marketing and production. Sony probably thought they could enter the Playstation ecosystem at a lower price point than the CV1, with a much bigger marketing push to the casual crowd. They probably thought they could slowly roll out PC support, once Morpheus pushed PS4 sales out the ass.
Now. They no longer have this luxury. Overnight, they've lost their marketing and financial advantage. They really need to launch on PC if they don't want to be left with scraps.
Did you even read my post?
I find it very alarming that they didn't announce PC support from the get-go.
/v/ meltdowns are the best. Komm susser Tod is so perfect for their reaction lol.
Doesn't this show a huge flaw in funding Kickstarter?
They just took around 2.5 million in pledged money from 10,000 people and turned it into 2 billion.
These people who pledged money will see nothing out of this, they just sold the company.
They can take the money and run, and the people who initially funded this will have nothing to actually get their money back.
There needs to be a kickstarter like system where the people who invest actually have a share in the company, that way the people who actually back the product have to live up to their claims and can't just sell out, while rewarding early investors if something like this happens.
I mean really, where else in the world can you make a product with such low risk, high reward initial investment?
I think so. At least I hope so. From the sound of it they're chasing the sort of "second life in real life" dream, which would imply that they want the best VR they can get.
Its not going to go straight facebook at first obviously. There idea is for buying and interacting with goods and services in a vitual "world"I'm fairly sure this won't affect CV1 at least.
I hope Oculus does a hour long E3 presser this year to announce the consumer version plus games available at launch. With this backing, I'm expecting the consumer version to be truly great.
Yeah, I couldn't get angry with the Oculus Rift guys at all, if you turn down that much money you either have rock solid will, have about that much or more to begin with, or it's something truly reprehensible you're being offered it for (and this definitely isn't that.)Well that just killed any momentum the OR had. To be fair, for $2B I'd sell out in a heartbeat too. Good for them.
Holy shit at this news... I'm not sure what to think about it.
![]()
Carmack: "I can't hear you over the sound of all this flapping money"
It's only journalists at E3 nowadays right? I could only imagine the booing if it was a Free4All...
If there is one person that you can trust to be brutally honest, it's Carmack. You should see his quakecon 2013 talk and thoughts on the xbox one uproar. It probably fits here nicely
From the sound of it they're thinking about maybe making some sort of virtual world. Honestly sounds like something Carmack and Facebook would both be really into trying to make happen, albeit for completely different reasons.
Sony wins