Boba Fett Lords Over Times Square

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How About Some Transformers, Dungeons & Dragons, and Mission Impossible 7 Updates?

Early footage from 2023’s Transformers: Rise of the Beasts, Dungeons & Dragons: Honor Among Thieves and Mission: Impossible: Dead Reckoning Part 1 just screened at CinemaCon in Las Vegas and we’re here to tell you all about it.

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Andrew Garfield Finally Reveals Whom He Was Texting In That Viral Oscars Meme

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Amazon’s Fire TV Cube is the first set top box to stream directly to hearing aids

Watching TV with hearing aids is about to get a little easier for Amazon Fire TV Cube owners. The second generation of the Fire TV Cube will now support Audio Streaming for Hearing Aids (ASHA) for compatible Bluetooth-enabled Starkey hearing aids. While the ability to stream TV audio to hearing aids has been around for a while, it normally requires an additional third-party device. Not all smart TVs support Bluetooth, so many hard-of-hearing users are forced to connect their hearing aids to their smartphone or a special adapter. But Fire TV will now allow users to directly pair their hearing aids with the streaming box.

ASHA (which is a Google-led initiative) has been available for Bluetooth devices since 2020. Fire TV Cube will be the first streaming device in the US to support ASHA, but it’s a safe bet to say more platforms will be on board in the future.

In order to pair their hearing aids to their Fire TV Cube, users should select “Settings” from Fire TV’s home screen. Users should then select “Accessibility”, followed by “Hearing Aids” and follow the on-screen instructions to pair them.

One drawback to relying on Bluetooth is viewers must remain within a 10-feet distance to still pick up Fire TV’s signal. Amazon recommends that viewers connect over their hearing aids over a 5Ghz wifi network, within 10 feet and in line of sight to Fire TV Cubes. Viewers with 2.4GHz wifi can still connect to Fire TV, but should keep in mind that the strength of their signal will vary depending on spectrum congestion.

The Big Myth About Global Warming You Need To Stop Believing

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10 Science-Fantasy Books for You Funky Space Sorcerers

Science-Fantasy isn’t a new genre, per se, but it is one that is starting to get some clearer definitions within publishing, making it a buzzy place to read. Combining tropes and conventions of both science-fiction and fantasy, magic and time-space travel often go hand in hand. There are often unexplainable forces are…

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16 States Are Suing the US Postal Service

The U.S. Postal Service won’t give up gas without a fight, and now it’s getting one.

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The Quick and Easy Guide to Watching Robotech

With the news that a live-action adaptation of the classic ‘80s anime series Robotech has found a (fourth) director, it might be time to go back and revisit the beloved cartoon—or check it out for the very first time. Not only does it stand the test of time, it also holds an important place in the history of American…

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Varjo Reality Cloud: Ultra-Reality Experience The Easy Way

Varjo has announced the Varjo Reality Cloud, a secure SaaS platform that lets customers stream XR content from Autodesk VRED rendered on powerful enterprise-class hardware to consumer-level clients such as XR headsets, laptops, and mobile devices.

Varjo is well-known for its world-class VR headsets that feature eye-tracking and impressive human-resolution displays. The level of detail is so high that things like cockpit flight instruments are completely readable: an absolute necessity for the most immersive XR apps.

Previously, such a level of detail required connecting the XR headsets to a powerful local workstation to drive the rendering with a beefy (and very expensive) GPU and CPU configuration.

There are many situations where having physical possession of such an expensive computer might not be convenient. For instance, you might want to set up demo rooms in different locations, and physically deploying these computers is costly and might require on-site engineering expertise.

Varjo’s reality cloud is a remote rendering solution that solves this elegantly and efficiently. The rendering is done in a data center (AWS in this case) and streamed at high speed / low latency to a cheap thin client. For the end-user, It’s no more complicated than launching a regular app.

There are other cloud solutions like this, but Varjo is the only one I’ve seen that takes full advantage of the company’s Human Resolution rendering and displays. That’s a massive advantage in the enterprise XR business and an excellent reason to pay attention to this service.

Although you need a good Internet connection, it works on your typical consumer-level Internet. I tested it when Varjo rented a photo studio in San Francisco with run-the-mill internet connectivity. The service requires only 35Mbps (megabits per second).

Varjo uses little bandwidth thanks to a proprietary “foveated transport algorithm.” Foveated refers to the tracking of the eye gaze to prioritize something.

Varjo supports foveated rendering during the construction of each frame. However, foveated transport happens in the compression and transmission of the rendered frame over the network. The company claims it can achieve a lossless compression ratio of 1000:1.

Me (middle) with Varjo’s CTO Urho Konttori (right) and CBO Jussi Mäkinen (left)

Overall, the experience was great and comparable to an offline Varjo XR experience. There was no noticeable compression artifact, and the framerate was very acceptable for applications such as Architectural previews where you don’t always need 90 FPS+.

The first demo was a virtual car showroom with excellent integration of the car into the real-world studio. Varjo did a great job capturing the local light probes to render the 3D car as if it was in the physical room. I could even peek inside the vehicle, and every instrument was sharp and readable.

The meta-human demo. Photo from Varjo’s website, not from my actual session

The second demo was a “meta-human” (virtual character) that needed to be rendered realistically. Again, the extremely high resolution of Varjo headsets makes a world of difference when it comes to fine details such as hair or clothes texture (jeans, etc.). A lot of small things aggregate into very perceptible improvements. The meta-human is real enough that it felt weird to enter their personal space.

I haven’t created any Varjo Reality Cloud servers myself, but I’m well-familiar with the concept, and there’s little doubt that the Varjo Reality Cloud is attractive simply because it makes life much easier.

Additionally, renting virtual workstation instances for a short period instead of buying them makes it possible to rapidly scale and shut down utilization for special events or even weekly executive content reviews. That’s potentially a massive increase in usage, associated with a modest cost increase. The added value is straightforward to measure

Varjo Reality Cloud: Ultra-Reality Experience The Easy Way

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Amber Heard Completed Only A Fraction Of Promised ACLU Donation

The ACLU’s lawyers helped write the Washington Post opinion piece at the center of Johnny Depp’s lawsuit against his ex-wife.