The Conservative wrote:If it was that reproducible don't you think companies like Oculus would have solved it already?Speaker to Animals wrote:No, what I am saying is that you can simulate the real world by directly throwing light onto the retina in such a way that the brain will translate that to vision you recognize as real world. It wouldn't look any different than the real world, in theory.
The math required to do that is probably a bit complex. You'd need, at bare minimum, an applied mathematician, a physicist (with specialization in optics), and a computer science guy (also with specialization in image processing and a heavy dose of theoretical computer science) to work out the algorithm.
You wouldn't get sick from that. It wouldn't be any different than looking around in the real world.
I am sure they have some research division sort of working on it, but big corporations like Facebook don't really innovate that way. They just buy up the patents from people who do.
For instance, the turbocoding algorithms used on all the high speed wireless networks were developed by some French guys. They patented it and now it's licensed to all the major wireless network manufacturers.
Most of those deep theoretical innovations are worked out by grad students. If you are business savvy enough, you can do what the founders of Google did and build a startup around it. But for something like that, you'd need massive capital infusion to start building prototypes and eventually get manufacturing contracts in China to be able to bring the headsets to market. You'd probably be better off selling it to somebody like Google or just licensing it out.