“The Mega Visor Display (メガバイザーディスプレイ), commonly abbreviated to MVD, is a virtual reality-based head-mounted display developed by Sega AM4, and Virtuality.
Used in the VR-1 indoor theme park attraction and Sega Net Merc arcade system for Dennou Senki Net Merc, it has been retrospectively recognized as one of the most advanced headsets of the 1990s, and continues to stand as Sega's most successful foray into virtual reality.”
source: https://segaretro.org/Mega_Visor_Display
open access journal of management, call for paper chemistry, ugc approved journals for management
Computerized applications are used at greater extent that helps the training in medical field. Augmented reality applications possess an interactive virtual layer on top of reality. The use of augmented reality applications acts as a boon to medical education because they combine digital parts with the practical learning environment. The aim of this research is to investigate the scope of augmented reality applications in medical professionals training [1] This technology is different from virtual reality, in which the user is immersed in a virtual world generated by the computer. The AR system brings the computer into the user world by augmenting the real environment with virtual objects. [2] In Augmented Reality, physical and artificial objects are mixed together in a hybrid space where the user can move without constraints. This paper aims to provide information of current technologies and benefits of augmented reality and to describe the benefits and open issues. [3]
'Wilson's Heart': Inside Oculus' new psychological thriller
‘Wilson’s Heart’: Inside Oculus’ new psychological thriller
You come to as thunder crashes overhead. Streaks of lightning illuminate the room through gaping holes in the building’s blown-out facade as you begin to take in your surroundings. But before you move on to the more pressing matters of why you’re waking up in a sanitarium and why the building looks as though it survived an artillery bombardment, you’ll first have to figure out how to…
A head-mounted display (or helmet-mounted display, for aviation applications), both abbreviated HMD, is a display device, worn on the head or as part of a helmet, that has a small display optic in front of one (monocular HMD) or each eye (binocular HMD).
There is also an optical head-mounted display (OHMD), which is a wearable display that can reflect projected images and allows a user to see…
Imagine driving a car, using a heads-up display projectionon the windshield to navigate through an unfamiliar city. This is augmented reality (AR); the information is used to not only guide you along a route, but also to alert you to salient information in your surroundings, such as cyclists or pedestrians. The correct placement of virtual content is not only…