None of that is necessary. They just need one thing: Eye Tracking, for one feature: Eye Contact.
With that, they can be to the early 21st century office what Microsoft was to the late 20th century office.
The problem is Facebook is a consumer company, and VR will be an office tech (at first) and I’m not sure Facebook has the culture to do what Microsoft did. They need to adapt fast.
But technologically, they’re already there. The Meta Quest pro has everything it needs to be what Dell was to business in the 90s and 2000s. At this point Software and Sales is the game they stand to lose.
If I were Slack I would be gunning for the same prize. But I haven’t heard anything about VR at Slack, so it seems like they’re going to lose.
When I tell people that the Quest Pro's new hot feature is 'eye-tracking', then follow up with 'so now Meta knows what you look at and for how long', they are creeped out.
With that, they can be to the early 21st century office what Microsoft was to the late 20th century office.
The problem is Facebook is a consumer company, and VR will be an office tech (at first) and I’m not sure Facebook has the culture to do what Microsoft did. They need to adapt fast.
But technologically, they’re already there. The Meta Quest pro has everything it needs to be what Dell was to business in the 90s and 2000s. At this point Software and Sales is the game they stand to lose.
If I were Slack I would be gunning for the same prize. But I haven’t heard anything about VR at Slack, so it seems like they’re going to lose.