![]() Just turning your head is so intuitive, way more than what flavor of desktop manager hotkeys one has to use to scroll between virtual desktops. Then I’m tabbing between research and my active task. ![]() Then one communication seems to always dominate a screen. My monitoring projects always get lost in the background so I’m not really monitoring them. I usually have an active project, multiple research windows, monitoring our ticketing system, communications, and a couple monitoring windows of a jobs and scripts going. I have a three screen setup at work and honestly feel like it isn’t enough. It takes little time to grow accustomed to not seeing your hands. Aside from losing the facetime with coworkers I don’t underatand how this would not increase productivity once fully fleshed out. I’m rather surprised by the number of negative comments to this article. It makes us wonder how long it is before tech workers on their way to lunch are marked by a telltale red circle on their face. Overall it’s a very cool tech demo that could turn into something more. Imagine sharing your personal CAD session on another user’s screen and seeing theirs beside yours, allowing for simultaneous design. ![]() Even pair CAD might be possible depending on how its done. Pair programming isn’t so bad, and now the possibility of doing it effectively while remote seems a little more possible. Imagine how many stack overflow windows you could have open at the same time!Īnother exciting possibility is that the digital work-spaces can be shared among multiple users. As their head moves, the window directly in front grows in focus. The user can put up multiple windows in a sphere around them. The software runs on Windows and Android at the moment. ![]() That’s why he’s building a VR Desktop straight out of our deepest cyberpunk fantasies. Thinks even two monitors is too little space to really lay out his windows properly. ![]()
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