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Unity 2020 Virtual Reality Projects - Third Edition

You're reading from  Unity 2020 Virtual Reality Projects - Third Edition

Product type Book
Published in Jul 2020
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781839217333
Pages 592 pages
Edition 3rd Edition
Languages
Author (1):
Jonathan Linowes Jonathan Linowes
Profile icon Jonathan Linowes

Table of Contents (15) Chapters

Preface 1. Virtually Everything for Everyone 2. Understanding Unity, Content, and Scale 3. Setting Up Your Project for VR 4. Using Gaze-Based Control 5. Interacting with Your Hands 6. Canvasing the World Space UI 7. Teleporting, Locomotion, and Comfort 8. Lighting, Rendering, Realism 9. Playing with Physics and Fire 10. Exploring Interactive Spaces 11. Using All 360 Degrees 12. Animation and VR Storytelling 13. Optimizing for Performance and Comfort 14. Other Books You May Enjoy

What is virtual reality?

Today, we are witnesses to burgeoning consumer-accessible VR, an exciting technology that promises to transform in a fundamental way how we interact with information, our friends, and the world at large.

What is virtual reality? In general, VR is the computer-generated simulation of a 3D environment, which seems very real to the person experiencing it, using special electronic equipment. The objective is to achieve a strong sense of being present (presence) in the virtual environment.

Today's consumer tech VR involves wearing HMD (head-mounted display) goggles to view stereoscopic 3D scenes. You can look around by moving your head, and walk around by using hand controls or motion sensors. You are engaged in a fully immersive experience. It's as if you're really there in some other virtual world. The following photo shows me, the author, experiencing an Oculus Rift Development Kit 2 (DK2) in 2015:

VR is not new. It's been here for decades, albeit hidden away in academic research labs and high-end industrial and military facilities. It was big, clunky, and expensive. Ivan Sutherland invented the first HMD in 1965 (see https://amturing.acm.org/photo/sutherland_3467412.cfm). It was tethered to the ceiling with metal pipes! In the past, several failed attempts have been made to bring consumer-level VR products to the market:

In 2012, Palmer Luckey, the founder of Oculus VR LLC, gave a demonstration of a makeshift head-mounted VR display to John Carmack, the famed developer of the Doom, Wolfenstein 3D, and Quake classic video games. Together, they ran a successful Kickstarter campaign and released a developer kit called Oculus Rift Development Kit 1 (DK1) to an enthusiastic community. This caught the attention of investors, as well as Mark Zuckerberg (Facebook CEO), and in March 2014, Facebook bought the company for $2 billion. With no product, no customers, and infinite promise, the money and attention that it attracted helped fuel a new category of consumer products.

At the same time, others were also working on their own products, which were soon introduced to the market, including Steam's HTC VIVE, Google Daydream, Sony PlayStation VR, Samsung Gear VR, Microsoft's immersive Mixed Reality, and more. New innovations and devices that enhance the VR experience continue to be introduced.

Most of the basic research has already been done, and the technology is now affordable, thanks in large part to the mass adoption of devices that work on mobile technology. There is a huge community of developers with experience in building 3D games and mobile apps. Creative content producers are joining in and the media is talking it up. At last, virtual reality is real!

Say what? Virtual reality is real? Ha! If it's virtual, how can it be... Oh, never mind.

Eventually, we will get past the focus on the emerging hardware devices and recognize that content is king. The current generation of 3D development software (commercial, free, or open source) that has spawned a plethora of indie (independent) game developers can also be used to build nongame VR applications.

Though VR finds most of its enthusiasts in the gaming community, the potential applications reach well beyond that. Any business that presently uses 3D modeling and computer graphics will be more effective if it uses VR technology. The sense of immersive presence that is afforded by VR can enhance all common online experiences today, which includes engineering, social networking, shopping, marketing, entertainment, and business development. In the near future, viewing 3D websites with a VR headset may be as common as visiting ordinary flat websites today.

It's probably worthwhile to clarify what virtual reality is not by comparing VR with augmented reality.

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