@cwebber Mb one giant virtual display could do the trick :P
@cwebber I've been using a less fancy version without the head tracking and I've found it better than laptop screens when I'm on the go. I'm gonna save up a bit to get this new model later this year though.
Would probs need the perscription lens inserts to see clearly. With my current setup I take breaks every 3 hours or more. My current glasses: https://pro.viture.com/
@mauve It's struck me before that if I were to persue a full cyborg setup, I might want to use the same boards that MNT is already using on their computers, since I'd like to see that direction of computing succeed. And @mntmn posted this thing a bit ago https://mastodon.social/@mntmn/114241921879862683 which makes me wonder whether that's a positive possible direction for full cyborg-dorkification
@cwebber @mntmn My gameplan right now is to get a framework mobo on a portable 3d printed case. https://www.printables.com/model/1051364-framework-13-mainboard-case-with-battery
My GPD WIN 4 setup has been pretty good TBH. Getting the physical keyboard + controllers in my hands has been handy. Been doing presentations with my HMD as a teleprompter lately and doing supervised walking while coding on the go.
@cwebber Yeah if your eyes are having trouble it might make things worse. One tip I got thanks to @burrito.space was to have the screen blank out periodically to force you to give your eyes a break which I've been meaning to incorporate
@cwebber @mauve I have the Viture Pro and yeah I get some eye fatigue from it after a while. The FoV is also pretty disappointing, which might be unavoidable with glasses that use birdbath optics like these
I'm hoping in the next few years we'll see glasses with waveguides that you could conceivably just wear as your regular glasses and then boom it's a display when you plug it in
@jfred @cwebber @mauve My main issue is the lack of an IPD adjustment. I mostly like them but using them to game on my ROG Ally X I have to use a plugin that shrinks the display area slightly to keep the edges sharp instead of blurry.
For my uses they are nearly perfect, but I'd really appreciate if they stopped marketing stuff like this as a "giant tv projected in front of you" and instead went with "small monitor right in front of your face" which is more honest.
@reflex @jfred @cwebber Yeah! They actually have an extra level of dimming rather than just on/off.
I mostly use my vitures for coding when on the go and for watching stuff via the neckband while I'm doing chores.
The xreal beam pro seems neat as a companion device but I'll probably just use my phone instead if I end up getting their glasses.
I have the XReal Air2 pros and now the One Pro.
i love them for movies/tv and gaming with steam deck. it’s great! i use it all the time and recommend it. eye strain is not too bad.
BUT… i don’t love the resolution and text aliasing, especially when moving your head when stabilized. it is workable for sure, and can serve well in a pinch - but i find it unpleasant for work/coding in any real capacity.
@trey @cwebber That makes sense, I usually set my display scale factor to 2.0 to compensate but some UIs just can't handle it sadly. The aliasing sounds rough. SimulaXR did custom stuff to wayland rendering to make text more clear but that hasb't made it out of there and sadly the xreals have no chance of doing the dame at the X1 chip level.
@Sh4d0w_H34rt @cwebber They do but they can't account for astigmatism, only a range of miopia. I like them for sharing but I want to get the lens inserts so I can get rid of all blurring :P
@mauve You may have seen my writeup about the DIY FOSS Cyborg guy's setup https://dustycloud.org/blog/the-diy-foss-cyborg/
Zacchae claims no eye fatigue in using the XReal Airs with prescription inserts, though that doesn't seem to be the case generally for many people I've seen writing about it
I have enough eye fatigue as is, that's maybe the main thing holding me back