« At the end of the day, content is going to be the most important piece, because if that doesn’t work, it doesn’t matter what type of hardware device you have, » EON Reality Chief Executive Mats Johansson said.
It sounded so promising. Anyone, anywhere would be able to strap on a headset in their living room and be able to experience events anywhere in the world – or outside of it – as if they were really there.
Oculus, the VR business bought for $2 billion by Facebook Inc last year, said this week it would start shipping a consumer version of its Rift headset in early 2016, raising hopes that investment in VR software will finally take off.
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