Night Goat
The Immovable Autism
I'm pretty sure it's VietnamThis is what you Euros get for not helping the South.
I think you might be a little upset about some historical event, but I'm not sure what.
I'm pretty sure it's VietnamThis is what you Euros get for not helping the South.
I think you might be a little upset about some historical event, but I'm not sure what.
Instead, the Newellian empire has decided to collaborate with Oculus Rift in order to further its goals for a VR-powered future in which PC is king.
So in late 2012, guy goes to kickstarter and gets 9k people to give him 2 million so he can start a company. About 15 months later, he sells said company for 2 billion.
Damn, those KS backers must be really happy with the investment they made, when they get their share they will surely- oh wait...
TESO also has (unofficial, but functional) OR support. That's over 12 million potential customers already.
So in late 2012, guy goes to kickstarter and gets 9k people to give him 2 million so he can start a company. About 15 months later, he sells said company for 2 billion.
Damn, those KS backers must be really happy with the investment they made, when they get their share they will surely- oh wait...
https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/1523379957/oculus-rift-step-into-the-game/comments
I suppose I will get a FB account now, so that may lead to some writing a little longer than tweet length...
I have a deep respect for the technical scale that FB operates at. The cyberspace we want for VR will be at this scale.
For the record, I am coding right now, just like I was last week.I expect the FB deal will avoid several embarrassing scaling crisis for VR.
Ubermenches never were hyped for this kind of gimmick anyway.
Ubermenches never were hyped for this kind of gimmick anyway.
Cleve was actually very excited about Rift integration in Grimoire 2.
This would be a good time for someone to Kickstart a Rift alternative. Keep the dream alive.
...and then sell that to Facebook.
Jesus fuck, both threads spelled "Oculus" wrong.
It's a funny coincidence that in Consumerist's "Worst company in America" tomorrow is Facebook's round.
We have not gotten into all the details yet, but a lot of the news is coming. The key points:
1) We can make custom hardware, not rely on the scraps of the mobile phone industry. That is insanely expensive, think hundreds of millions of dollars. More news soon.
2) We can afford to hire everyone we need, the best people that fit into our culture of excellence in all aspects.
3) We can make huge investments in content. More news soon.
----Just promise me there will be no specific Facebook tech tie-ins.----
I promise.
Why would we want to sell to someone like MS or Apple? So they can tear the company apart and use the pieces to build out their own vision of virtual reality, one that fits whatever current strategy they have? Not a chance.
We promise we won't change. If anything, our hardware and software will get even more open, and Facebook is onboard with that.
I won't change, and any change at Oculus will be for the better. We have even more freedom than we had under our investment partners because Facebook is making a long term play on the success of VR, not short-term returns.
A lot of people are upset, and I get that. If you feel the same way a year from now, I would be very surprised.
We are not going to lock people out because they compete. We have been working on a variety of first party applications, but are completely open to community equivalents. It would be arrogant of us to assume that our solutions will be the best solutions, users can decide for themselves.
This deal will definitely make things better. You are right, we have struggled to properly support indie devs because we had to focus our limited resources on our closest partners, that has been a failing that I want to fix. Indie developers are the ones driving this VR revolution more than anyone else, and one of my personal goals has been to support them in a much stronger way.
This deal specifically lets us greatly lower the price of the Rift.
This is about the best possible outcome for the future of virtual reality, not my wallet.
Keep in mind that Mark Zuckerberg has publicly spoken against NSA surveillance.
The same poll that said EA was worse than a company whose employment standards in Asia are so bad they gotta build nets to stop people from killing themselves...
It's a funny coincidence that in Consumerist's "Worst company in America" tomorrow is Facebook's round.
It's not very surprising that the beneficiary of a $2 billion deal would try to do damage control, fact is "Facebook" is probably one of the worst choices they could have picked.Now watch the concern trolls swarming in, bereft of all other avenues to channel their hatred, and complain about the Kickstarter backers getting a bum deal when everybody else gets massive discounts.