This thread is for anyone working on personal projects to share their progress, and hold themselves somewhat accountable to a group of peers.
Post your project, your progress from last week, and what you hope to accomplish this week.
If you want to be pinged with a reminder asking about your project, let me know, and I'll harass you each week until you cancel the service
Jump in the discussion.
No email address required.
Notes -
It's just at the napkin stage, now, and I don't yet have the programming chops to pull it off. But there's some fun ideas happening in this sphere, and while it'll be a long while before I'm even thinking about that level of design, it's a good way to keep motivation to learn.
With the caveat that I've only had them in my hands a day so far, depends a lot on what tradeoffs you're wanting to make, and what your use case is.
The One Lites are lightweight and surprisingly bright, but adjustability is mediocre, especially for very large or very small IPDs. The resolution is about the max of what's relevant for the field of view, but the field of view isn't great (~45ish degrees diagonal), and the lower framerate compared to the Pros or XReals newer offerings is noticeable for gaming (and fixing a virtual object in real space while the user's head is moving). No AR glasses are going to be stylish, but while the birdbath-style optics and Temu-brand sunglasses don't scream 'geek' as much as a Moverio set, the thick frames still look weird (arguably weirder) indoors and the newer generations with waveguide optics are thinner and better quality. The diopter settings are nice if you're nearsighted, but they can't handle astigmatism and you'll still need prescription lenses if you want to see the world too.
That said, it's really hard to beat the price, especially with the very robust used market going around.
It's not a standalone device, so if you're wanting a HUD outside of the office or a commute they're not easy to use. I don't have a compatible smartphone, and compatibility is complicated with any of these glasses. Viture sells a neckband style mini-computer, and it's supposedly pretty lackluster in about every way. Most (Thunderbolt-equipped) laptops work, but if you want to use a desktop computer or raspberry pi it can get more complicated -- the Pro Dock is very heavily built to handle some goofiness with the Nintendo Switch, but it might be useful for some of those cases and isn't an awful deal.
Dedicated devices like the Even Realities stuff might be better if you want an ultrasimple HUD that connects to your phone, and they're low enough profile that I could see them in a normal eyeglasses store, though in turn they're supposed to be a nightmare for hobbyists to develop anything serious around, and the screen specs are (intentionally) pretty crap.
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