this post was submitted on 29 Apr 2025
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[–] [email protected] 92 points 2 weeks ago (69 children)

This AR obsession is utterly baffling to me. There are so few real applications and the hardware requirements are insane so it's not something that will get widely adapted anyway. Sure in a decade or so it might have matured enough to have shed all these issues, but AR/VR feels like a really out of touch thing to prusue, especially if you look at the garbage ideas they have on how to use it - virtual meetings??

I get movies and games on these, possibly even some recording and porn, but these are not their B2B wet dreams anyway.

[–] LiPoly 80 points 2 weeks ago (22 children)

In theory, there’s a Million awesome business applications for it.

Let’s say you’re in construction and your glasses tell you exactly what to build where and how.

You’re a waiter and the glasses tell you which table ordered what, needs attention, etc.

You’re a network engineer and the glasses show you on every port which device is connected.

And don’t even get me started on the military applications.

Of course we’re not there yet. But that’s why they’re so obsessed with it. They want to be the first.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 2 weeks ago* (last edited 2 weeks ago) (1 children)

you're a network engineer and the glasses show you on every port which device is connected

Unifi equipment already can sorta do this! The little dot pattern on the screen is an AR code and you can use the app to see this. It's pretty cool actually. I've never actually used it for real work though, I just look at the dashboard on my laptop and find the port that way.

It would be really really cool to be able to just touch the physical port and be able to change the settings in real space with AR glasses though.

[–] LiPoly 2 points 2 weeks ago

Yep, that’s why I was thinking of that example 😄

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