Vive Le Vive!

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Vive Le Vive!
Number 2801
Broadcast Date JULY 5, 2016
Episode Length 38:11
Hosts Patrick Beja
Guests Erin Carson

CNET’s Erin Carson joins Patrick Beja with hands-on reviews of HTC Vive, Oculus Rift and Playstation VR headsets. Which of the three fits and works the best?

Guest

Top Stories

New stats from comScore show 14% of smartphone users aged 35 and older use Snapchat up from 2% in April 2013. And 38% of 25-34-year-olds use Snapchat up from 5% in 2013. But it's still young person's game with 69% of 18-24 year olds on the service up from 24%. ComSCore attributes the addition of My Stories to the growth of the platform.
The South China Morning Post reports that the Cyberspace Administration of China issued new instructions, forbidding news and social networking sites from publishing "unverified" news. Specifically, the instructions state “No website is allowed to report public news without specifying the sources, or report news that quotes untrue origins.” Some sites received warnings and punishment as part of the initiative, including Sina.com, Ifeng.com, Caijing.com.cn, Qq.com and 163.com, however no specifcs were disclosed.
Xbox head Phil Spencer revealed in a tweet that wheelchair avatars for Xbox Live are “not far off”. Came as a response to a user tweet suggesting the addition of wheelchair avatars. Xbox Director of Program Management, Mike Ybarra followed up with a tweet of what the avatars might look like.
Recode has obtained documents regarding Alphabet’s Sidewalk Labs public Wi-Fi kiosks. The 9.5 foot high ADA compliant kiosks will provide free gigabit Wi-Fi, US phone calls, USB charging ports, offer transport directions and sell an estimated $30,000 worth of digital advertising per year per kiosk. Each kiosk can provide real time street data using sensors to measure air pressure, humidity, temperature, pollutants, vibrations from vehicles, magnetic fields, sound levels, infrared visible and UV light, and Wi-Fi activity form nearby devices. Around 200 kiosks without their sensor suites have been installed in NYC. The kiosk’s cameras have not been turned on due to complaints from the NY Civil Liberites Union. The units are free but cities would responsible for the cost of installing them and connecting them to gigabit internet plus $5000/unit towards a maintenance fund.
BlackBerry announced Tuesday it will stop making its Classic smartphone 18 months after launch. However the company says it is on track to release an updated version of the BlackBerry 10 OS next month.
Security software maker CheckPoint says at least 10 million Android devices have been infected by malware they're calling HummingBad. Hummingbad gains root access to generate fraudulent advertising revenue while gathering information. That information and access to the phones can be sold. Check Point claims advertising analytics agency Yingmob is behind the malware. Check Point has been tracking the malware since its discovery in February.

Discussion

VR headsets

What are they like?
Advising potential buyers.
  • For the Oculus Rift and HTC Vive (and PS VR):
Screen quality?
Comfortable to wear?
Cable management while using?
Unique features?
Games and software libraries?
Future prospects?
Overall opinion: does one stand out?

Pick of the Day

  • Scotch tape (frosted variety)
For covering your camera....Scotch tape (the frosted variety). Some newer laptop models use the camera to judge screen brightness, you want it to be able to gauge the light in a room, but protect privacy. I don't think you can beat the cost as scotch tape is readily available from almost anywhere.
Submitted by Benjamin

Messages

I'm catching up on last week's episodes. I was listening to Scott talking about his dentist and how VR would immediately help him vew scots virtual tooth. But I have to wonder, how?

To me, VR will hinder 3d modeling, not help it. When using a mouse or trackball, I can rest my arm on my desk. Really, I mostly use my fingers to move my mouse, giving me great precision. Maby I am misunderstand how VR controllers will work, but if I have to hold something out in space, that's not going to be very accurate. My heavy arm will be shaking all over the place. And I would get very tired very quickly.

VR would give me the option to walk around the object, but why would I want to? I'd rather be lazy and sit in my chair. :) It would also make it harder to collaborate. With a screen I could just say "hey Joe, look at this" and just point. With VR, how would I do that. Two VR headsets and a virtual pointer? Just seems more difficult and more expensive.

Don't get me wrong. VR will help certain industries. It would be great for architects giving virtual walk throughs. But for engineering and 3d modeling? I don't see where the benefit is. Am I missing something?
Sent by Josh Cawood


You guys mentioned briefly that there was 1 fatality in however-many miles. You guys then mentioned the rate of fatality in human driven motor vehicles. I would advise caution when comparing the two figures.

The data set for automated vehicles is extremely limited, you basically only have one data point. The other data set is very well developed over several years with thousands of data points. The actual fatality rate for automated vehicles may be much larger or much smaller, we really just have to wait and see.

That being said, you guys had a great conversation and I really enjoyed hearing differing view-points about the long term feasibility of automated vehicles!
Sent by Paul

YouTube

Links



Preceded by:
"Announcing New Headlines Show"
Vive Le Vive!
Followed by:
"Aging Snapsters"