HTC Vive Focus Plus Standalone Gets Wireless PC VR Streaming Beta

HTC just launched a beta for wirelessly streaming VR PC content to its own standalone headset, Vive Focus Plus, following on from the launch of Oculus Link last month.

According to a press release the feature, which is added in the latest software updates to Viveport and Vive Focus Plus, lets you play ‘thousands’ of Viveport titles on the headset. However it’s not clear if Viveport Streaming lets you access VR apps on other services like SteamVR, much like Oculus Link does. We’ve reached out to HTC to confirm this.

VIVEPORT Streaming

The Vive Focus Plus does offer full six degrees of freedom (6DOF) tracking for both head and hands in VR. On paper, it is possible for Focus Plus to do almost everything a regular Vive or other PC VR headset does via streaming. But we’ve had issues with the headset’s controller tracking in the past and streaming solutions can add on extra latency that can spoil comfort and immersion in VR. We haven’t tried Viveport Streaming for ourselves yet, so we can’t comment as to how well this works. We’ve also had issues using the Vive Focus Plus natively in our limited time with the kit.

Viveport Streaming is available exclusively to Viveport Infinity members for the time being. In the future, HTC will add support for headsets that run its Vive Wave SDK though, to the best of our knowledge, these are only available in China.

There’s a lot else to consider, though. For starters, the Vive Focus Plus is not sold as a consumer-level headset in the west. It’s targeted as such in China, but in the US, Europe and other regions it’s billed an enterprise-focused device that ships for $799. That’s double the price of the $399 Oculus Quest. Somewhat confusingly, the press release states that streaming “is currently only available for home users, but we expect to make it accessible to enterprise users in the near future.”

We would assume that means that enterprise customers can’t stream their applications, which aren’t published on Viveport, as of right now. Again, we’ve reached out to HTC to check.

Also note that this feature is only available for the Focus Plus. The original Focus, which launched around six months before the Plus with a 3DOF motion controller, is not supported at this time.

We can’t see many western VR fans making use of this feature if it really works, then. Hopefully, we’ll be able to bring you some impressions in the near future.

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HTC’s Vive Cosmos And Vive Focus Are Getting An Eye Tracking Addon

HTC’s Vive Cosmos, Vive Focus, Vive Focus Plus, and Vive are getting an eye tracking addon from Chinese startup 7invensun.

Called Droolon F1, the addon is priced at $149. The startup claims it takes just minutes to install, and adds only 60 grams to the headset (a roughly 10% weight increase). It connects via USB and has two sampling rate options, 120Hz and 240Hz.

This isn’t 7invensun’s first Vive eye tracking addon. Back in April 2017, the company announced a $220 eye tracking addon for the original Vive. At the time HTC told us that it would launch in the west in Q3 2017, but we’re not aware of this actually happening. Notably, 7invensun is a member of HTC’s Vive X accelerator initiative.

Droolon F1 uses the same SRanipal SDK from HTC, so content developed for HTC’s Vive Pro Eye enterprise headset should work without any updates needed. This is an improvement over the original addon which used its own separate SDK.

Eye tracking has several uses in VR. It can detect the user’s interpupillary distance to enable the optimal optical calibration. It can be used in social VR to communicate real eye movements, and eye contact. It can also be used by advertisers to collect data on what the user is looking at.

But most importantly, it can enable foveated rendering. The human eye is only high resolution in the very center, as you can notice by looking around your room. VR headsets can take advantage of this by only rendering where you’re directly looking in high resolution. Everything else can be rendered at a significantly lower resolution. However, there doesn’t seem to be any confirmation on whether Droolon F1’s tracking quality is sufficient for foveated rendering at this time.

vive pro eye foveated rendering
Foveated rendering on Vive Pro Eye

Preorders will open in November, and HTC claims it will start worldwide shipping in December. The company hasn’t stated which countries it will ship to, but we’ve reached out to clarify this and will update this article with their response.

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HTC CEO Cher Wang Steps Down As Vive Cosmos Approaches

Cher Wang, CEO of HTC Corporation, is stepping down as head of the company.

Wang, who remains Chairwoman of the HTC board, will be replaced by Yves Maitre from French telecom company, Orange. In a press release, the company said its former CEO will now focus on “future technologies” including its Vive Reality initiative.

“When I took over as CEO four years ago, I set out to reinvent HTC as a complete ecosystem company and lay the foundations for the company to flourish across 5G and XR [extended reality],” Wang said in a prepared statement. “So, now is the perfect time to hand over the stewardship of HTC to a strong leader to guide us on the next stage of our journey,”

Wang became CEO of HTC in 2015, replacing Peter Chou. That was roughly a year before it launched the HTC Vive VR headset with Valve. Over the following years, HTC launched four more VR headsets, including the enterprise-focused Vive Pro and Vive Pro Eye as well as the standalone Vive Focus and Vive Focus Plus.

But, as HTC expands its VR operations, declining smartphone sales routinely led to poor fiscal reports.

Maitre’s appointment suggests the company isn’t ready to throw in the towel on smartphones yet. In a prepared statement, though, the new CEO emphasized “both 5G and XR” as future growth areas for the company.

Next month HTC will launch its second consumer-focused PC VR headset, the Vive Cosmos. The kit offers impressive optics and inside-out tracking, with the promise of modular upgrades. But, at $699, we’ll have to wait and see how it competes with the affordable ($399) Oculus Rift S and the high-end ($999) Valve Index.

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Vive Focus Plus To Get Official Viveport PC VR Content Streaming In Q4 2019

Today at the ChinaJoy 2019 event, HTC announced that the Vive Focus Plus standalone VR headset will support integrated content streaming from Viveport via a nearby VR-ready PC over standard 5Ghz Wi-Fi networks.

The feature is described as a “one click” solution to offer “seamless content streaming” from Viveport accounts. This has been a hot topic for standalone VR headsets for some time and even the Oculus Quest has a host of solutions for PC content streaming but none of them are official from Oculus.

On the flip side, this solution for Vive Focus Plus is directly from HTC:

“5G Cloud VR has been a hot topic in the press recently, and in one to two years, after the 5G network is more robust, it will provide a new way for users to experience high quality VR without the need for a high-end PC. Until then, the new VIVEPORT Streaming capability being announced today will enable VR users to enjoy countless premium PC VR experiences on their standalone VR devices without the need for a wire.” said Alvin Wang Graylin, China President, HTC in a prepared statement. “PC VR streaming as a concept is not new, but having the PC and the Vive Focus Plus complete the full complex network connection automatically and providing a seamless UI to starting any VR content on the linked PC from inside the VR device makes the experience a real breakthrough.”

The concept is great, but from what we’ve seen with our own two eyes the execution isn’t quite perfect. Jamie tried Viveport streaming over 5Ghz at Mobile World Congress (MWC) earlier this year and had the following to say:

“The idea of instantly jumping from one high-fidelity VR experience to another no matter where I am is exciting. We’re just not there quite yet.”

PC VR streaming from Viveport is coming first to the Vive Focus Plus in Q4 2019, but will also support “other full 6DOF standalone VR devices built on Vive Wave VR open platform” after that. There is no timeframe on other devices besides “soon.”

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Vive Enterprise Solutions Unit to Help Businesses Expand XR Portfolios

Consumer virtual reality (VR) may have restarted the industry as a whole but solutions for business have become a key part of many immersive companies strategy. Today, HTC Vive has announced a new business unit which aims to help in that endeavour, Vive Enterprise Solutions.

HTC Vive Focus Plus

Having launched the HTC Vive Pro Eye and Vive Focus Plus headsets, both squarely aimed at the enterprise market, the new business unit will help companies integrate XR hardware, software, and services for their professional needs.

Vive Enterprise Solutions will address four key areas where enterprises are investing today, Training and Simulation, Design and Visualization; Virtual Collaboration and Location-Based Entertainment and Attractions.

“With enterprise VR rapidly becoming the ‘killer app’ in the industry, we are providing solutions for small to large commercial creators to be successful and solve business needs,” says Daniel O’Brien, Head of Vive Enterprise Solutions, HTC Vive in a statement. “We’re in a unique position to offer enterprises a comprehensive business solution in part due to our own hardware innovation and collaborative industry relationships. We’re thrilled to continue to work with professional users to provide the best hardware, software, and services to help them succeed.”

HTC Vive Focus Plus

While developing integrated software solutions and professional services to provide the service and support corporate clients require, at the core of HTC Vive’s business solutions are of course its headsets. Companies have four devices to choose from depending on requirements. For high-fidelity, PC-based VR there’s the HTC Vive Pro starting from £1,082.50 GBP or the HTC Vive Pro Eye from £1,250 (great for analytics). Or when portability is high on the list then there’s always the HTC Vive Focus starting from £532.50 or the HTC Vive Focus Plus which retails from £639.00 (all prices exclude VAT).

Businesses looking to deploy more VR solutions are being spoilt for choice when it comes to new hardware. Training is a big part of why a lot of companies are investing in XR solutions and with that come hand interaction. Manus VR is one company at the forefront of this development, recently announcing the new Manus Prime Haptic glove. Offering a slightly different take is Dexta Robotics with its Dexmo Enterprise Edition force feedback glove. As more XR business solutions are developed VRFocus will keep you updated.

HTC Vive Focus Plus: Verkaufsstart ab 15. April für 799 US-Dollar

HTC veröffentlicht den Verkaufsstart und Preis der neuen Vive Focus Plus in Nordamerika. Demnach soll die autarke VR-Brille am 15. April für 799 US-Dollar auf dem Markt erscheinen. Im Preis inklusive sind zwei 6DoF-Controller.

HTC Vive Focus Plus – Autarke VR-Brille ab 15. April für 799 US-Dollar in Nordamerika erhältlich

Mit der Vive Focus Plus bringt HTC eine Neuauflage der Vive Focus auf den Markt und zielt damit hauptsächlich auf das Businesssegment ab. Die autarke VR-Brille besitzt im Gegensatz zum Vorgänger 6DoF-Tracking und setzt dafür auf Ultraschalltechnologie zur Positionserkennung. Neue Fresnel-Linsen sollen zudem ein schärferes Bild erzeugen und in puncto Komfort soll ein besseres Tragegefühl für längere Anwendungssessions Sorge tragen. Sonst hat sich technisch relativ wenig im Vergleich zur herkömmlichen Vive-Focus-Variante getan. Ein Qualcomm-Snapdrago-835-Prozessor dient als Herzstück der Hardware.

HTC-Vive-Focus-Plus

Software-technisch bietet das VR-Endgerät Zugriff auf eine Vive-Enterprise-Plattform, die gesicherte Kontoeinrichtung gewährleistet. Zudem gibt es einen Kiosk-Modus, um beschränkten Zugriff auf die VR-Inhalte in einer übersichtlichen Benutzeroberfläche zu ermöglichen. Dadurch soll in der Praxis durch ein angepasstes UI ein vereinfachter Zugang zu den entsprechenden Apps in den gewünschten Situationen bereitgestellt werden. Mit Viveport-Infinity-Abo werden zudem spezielle VR-Anwendungen im Viveport zugänglich.

Nun wurde sowohl Verkaufsstart wie auch -preis der neuen VR-Brille bekannt gegeben. Mit 799 US-Dollar schlägt die neue VR-Brille mit zwei beiliegenden Controllern zu Buche. Im Vergleich: Die autarke Oculus Quest soll 499 Euro kosten und ebenfalls zu einem späteren Zeitpunkt als Business-Version erscheinen.

Welche weiteren Vorteile die neue Vive Focus Plus für Businesskunden haben soll, ist derzeit noch nicht ersichtlich. HTC verspricht auf der eigenen Webseite “eine professionelle, mobile VR-Lösung, die einfach zu integrieren und zu verwalten ist. ”

Der Verkaufsstart beginnt ab 15. April in Nordamerika für 799 US-Dollar.

(Quelle: Upload VR | Vive Focus Plus)

Der Beitrag HTC Vive Focus Plus: Verkaufsstart ab 15. April für 799 US-Dollar zuerst gesehen auf VR∙Nerds. VR·Nerds am Werk!

Vive Focus Plus Costs $800 & Will Ship Worldwide Next Month

In February, HTC unveiled its full 6DOF version of the company’s standalone VR headset targeted at enterprise users, Vive Focus Plus. Now, the company has officially announced pricing and availability for the headset and controller bundle.

Vive Focus Plus is slated to launch worldwide on April 15th on HTC’s Vive website for $800, which will be available in 25 markets with 19 supported languages. The company announced the news at the Vive Ecosystem Conference (VEC 2019) in Shenzhen, China this week.

Vive Focus Plus is touted for its inclusion of ultrasonic 6DOF controllers—something that was notably missing from the original Vive Focus, which first saw launch in China as a consumer device in January 2018, and then later in the rest of world as an enterprise-focused headset the following November.

As with its predecessor, Vive Focus Plus is launching in China as a consumer device too, and will be priced at ¥5,699 yuan (~$850) which includes local value-added tax.

In addition to the new 6DOF controllers, which puts it at input parity with the upcoming $400 Oculus Quest, Vive Focus Plus also boasts better comfort and better visuals over the old design thanks to a slightly updated headstrap and improved Fresnel lenses.

We went hands-on with Vive Focus Plus, and true to the company’s word the newly refreshed optics are remarkably clearer than those on the previous Vive Focus. We didn’t get a long enough stint with Vive Focus Plus to determine how much a step above it is over its predecessor in terms of comfort, although it did feel notably more comfortable than the previous generation.

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Although marketed as enterprise device outside of China, HTC is boasting “nearly 250 Vive Wave applications at launch that run natively on the Vive Focus Plus.” How many of those have been built specifically for 6DOF controllers, we’re not sure at this time; all Vive Focus games are said to work on Vive Focus Plus.

The company additionally announced a ‘multi-mode’ capability which allows Vive Focus Plus to connect wirelessly with PCs to steam PCVR content via Rift Cat’s VRidge software, the ability to stream content from game consoles to a virtual screen, live 360 camera streaming, as well as upcoming Cloud VR services.

As for those promised Cloud VR services: the company’s recently announced 5G Hub is said to allow Vive Focus Plus users to stream cloud-rendered PC VR content, although it’s uncertain when this service will be live considering 5G is still in closed testing across very few cities worldwide.

Vive Focus Plus Specs

  • Display: 3K AMOLED (2,880 × 1,600)
  • Processor: Qualcomm Snapdragon 835
  • Audio: Built-in Speaker
  • Head Tracking: Optical inside-Out
  • Frame Rate: 75Hz
  • Field of View: 110-degrees
  • Battery: 4000 mAh
  • Controller: ultrasonic 6DOF
  • Data Connectivity: Wi-Fi 802.11 a/b/g/n/ac
  • Memory (RAM/ROM): 4/32 GB
  • Connector: USB Type-C
  • Power & Battery: Build-in rechargeable battery (up to 3 hours of active use time), QC3.0 fast charging

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Buy the HTC Vive Focus Plus for £754 Next Month

HTC Vive is one of a long line of virtual reality (VR) headset manufacturers that are building head-mounted displays (HMD) for business use, making a surprise announcement last month which unveiled the HTC Vive Focus Plus. Today, the company unveiled Vive Focus Plus pricing, availability, and some new features.

HTC Vive Focus Plus

The standalone headset will be available from 15th April 2019 via HTC Vive’s official website for £639 GBP (exVAT) and in Europe will be bundled with Advantage (£115 exVAT) – which offers dedicated support and service utilities for Vive Enterprise products – an enterprise licence and 2-year commercial warranty for a total of £754.

An upgraded version of the original HTC Vive Focus standalone headset, the Plus version has new Fresnel lenses for improved crisper visuals from the single AMOLED display which boasts a 2,880 × 1,600 resolution. The headset also comes with new 6DoF controllers, enhanced comfort for longer use sessions, and support for the Vive Wave Platform.

There’s also the new multi-mode capability turning the Vive Focus Plus into a VR hub for multiple content sources,  compatible with PC VR, PCs/laptops, smartphones, game consoles, 2D video streaming devices, live 360 camera streaming and upcoming Cloud VR services.

“With the unveiling of these enhancements for Vive Focus Plus, the VR industry is taking a big step forward with this new generation of full-fidelity standalone VR devices enabling total freedom of interaction and freedom of connection,” said Alvin Wang Graylin, China President, HTC in a statement. “We’re thrilled so many developers and partners are supporting this product with exciting experiences across a wide range of use cases, showcasing  the incredible opportunity for VR/AR to enter all facets of our lives

HTC Vive Focus Plus

Vive Focus Plus will be initially sold in 25 markets worldwide, supporting 19 languages. For further updates keep reading VRFocus.

HTC Vive Focus Plus Specs:

  • Display: 3K AMOLED (2880×1600)
  • Processor: Qualcomm Snapdragon™835
  • Audio: Built-in Speaker
  • Tracking: Inside-Out
  • Frame Rate: 75Hz
  • Field of View: 110-degrees
  • Battery: 4000 mAh
  • Controller: 6DoF
  • Data Connectivity: Wi-Fi® 802.11 a/b/g/n/ac
  • Memory (RAM/ROM): 4/32 GB
  • Connector: USB Type-C
  • Charging: QC3.0
  • Encryption: File-based (same security as Andriod Smartphone)

HTC On Why Vive Focus Plus Isn’t A Consumer Headset (Yet)

Vive Focus Plus Hands-On

VR rivals Oculus and HTC go head-to-head in the PC VR space with the Rift and Vive respectively. Each also have brand new standalone headsets on the horizon. Oculus is soon to release the Quest and HTC will upgrade its Vive Focus with the Focus Plus.

These devices have similar specifications. Both support six degrees of freedom (6DOF) tracking and have the controllers to match. Quest is a consumer device first and foremost. But Focus Plus is an enterprise-level device. Given their similarity, why isn’t HTC pitching Focus Plus to compete directly with Quest and target consumers?

We recently put that question to Vive GM, Dan O’Brien. He told UploadVR that it was down to the difference in infrastructures the consumer and business markets require.

“So when we see the consumer market and what we have to do there, there’s lower price points being asked for it, the level of content and the type of content that you need for it and the ecosystem that you need to deliver to a consumer market is pretty challenging for the level of content you can deliver with that type of headset,” O’Brien explained.

He continued, reasoning that the retention rate for this level of standalone headset hasn’t been that high thus far. “What we’ve seen on that lower end is a lot of people using the headset and then the return use is not really high,” he said.

“I think there’s a lot of other things you need to make real consumer adoption on the VR side happen,” O’Brien later continued. “But I think it’s going to be really interesting what some of those other competitive headsets go out there and try and move the market forward with. We’re excited about it, I’m excited someone else is taking on that charge”.

Focus Plus is due to launch in the second quarter of 2019 for an undisclosed price. We tried the headset at MWC last week and thought it still needed a little work.

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Oculus Go & Quest Enterprise Editions Expected To Launch This Year

oculus quest oculus go

A job listing spotted by Variety reveals that “Enterprise Editions” of Oculus Go and Quest are in the works. The listing claims that the editions will launch “in 2019”.

The job is listed as having the following responsibilities:

  • Design and develop enterprise features into Oculus mobile VR system applications
  • Design and develop VR frameworks to enable enterprise use cases such as corporate training
  • Ensure security and privacy concerns remain a top priority and are identified and addressed
  • Work with external developers innovating on future-of-work experiences

Facebook already sells Oculus Go to businesses through the Oculus For Business program. At $299 per unit the bundle includes 64GB of storage, a commercial warranty, and two facial interfaces.

But the software is still not tailored for enterprise use. Facebook’s target with Go has been mass market consumers. Features needed to make it a practical business product like a kiosk mode still don’t exist, but it’s planned for future. The OS also can’t be locked down or customized for enterprise needs.

HTC on the other hand has taken the opposite approach. The Vive Focus standalone is intended primarily for enterprise, not consumers. For $150 per headset the company offers Kiosk Mode, batch configuration, and remote app deployment. Just last month a higher end version, Vive Focus Plus, was announced with 6DoF controllers.

Enterprise editions of Go and Quest could be significant competition for HTC. While a less capable device, Go is only a fraction of the cost. And Quest offers the same resolution and 6DoF controllers capability as the Focus Plus- yet still at a lower price. If the Focus Plus is considerably higher priced than the $599 Focus, HTC could be in trouble in the enterprise market.

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