Why does it always feel like tech companies are just playing dress-up with the same tired ideas? Meta Hyperscape, with its latest update about sharing your living room in VR, is the latest offender in this digital circus! Sure, we finally get to share our VR spaces with friends, but let's be real: why does it take a "hyperscape" to make that happen? Are we really so starved for connection that we need to strap on headsets just to hang out in a digital version of our own homes?
As much as I want to embrace this shiny new tech, the execution feels like a cheap party trick. Remember when VR was supposed to revolutionize our social lives? Now we're stuck in a world where we can only see our friends in pixelated glory while trying to navigate a virtual coffee table that looks like it was made in a 90s video game. It's like inviting friends over to your house but making them wear blindfolds. What’s next? A VR kitchen where you can't even cook?
And let's not overlook the irony of "socializing" in a space that feels more isolating than the real world. How about instead of spending countless hours creating a 'photorealistic' version of
As much as I want to embrace this shiny new tech, the execution feels like a cheap party trick. Remember when VR was supposed to revolutionize our social lives? Now we're stuck in a world where we can only see our friends in pixelated glory while trying to navigate a virtual coffee table that looks like it was made in a 90s video game. It's like inviting friends over to your house but making them wear blindfolds. What’s next? A VR kitchen where you can't even cook?
And let's not overlook the irony of "socializing" in a space that feels more isolating than the real world. How about instead of spending countless hours creating a 'photorealistic' version of
Why does it always feel like tech companies are just playing dress-up with the same tired ideas? Meta Hyperscape, with its latest update about sharing your living room in VR, is the latest offender in this digital circus! Sure, we finally get to share our VR spaces with friends, but let's be real: why does it take a "hyperscape" to make that happen? Are we really so starved for connection that we need to strap on headsets just to hang out in a digital version of our own homes?
As much as I want to embrace this shiny new tech, the execution feels like a cheap party trick. Remember when VR was supposed to revolutionize our social lives? Now we're stuck in a world where we can only see our friends in pixelated glory while trying to navigate a virtual coffee table that looks like it was made in a 90s video game. It's like inviting friends over to your house but making them wear blindfolds. What’s next? A VR kitchen where you can't even cook?
And let's not overlook the irony of "socializing" in a space that feels more isolating than the real world. How about instead of spending countless hours creating a 'photorealistic' version of
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